The Fall of the Uncrowned King
Parnell's downfall wasn't political - it was personal, and it was devastating. In 1890, he was named in the divorce case of Captain William O'Shea, whose wife Katharine had been Parnell's secret partner for over a decade.
In Victorian Britain, this scandal was massive. The non-conformist Liberals who supported Home Rule were outraged. Gladstone delivered an ultimatum: either Parnell goes, or the Liberal-Irish alliance is finished.
The IPP faced an impossible choice. Stick with Parnell and lose their only realistic path to Home Rule, or dump their greatest leader to keep the Liberal alliance alive. The party split down the middle - Parnellites versus anti-Parnellites.
Parnell fought bitterly to retain control, but the stress destroyed him. He died in 1891, aged just 45, and the Home Rule movement was crippled for a decade. Ireland's "Uncrowned King" had fallen, and with him, the best chance of peaceful self-government.
Historical Impact: The Parnell Split created bitter divisions in Irish nationalism that lasted for years, showing how personal scandals can destroy entire political movements.