Ian Paisley: Timeline of his life and career

From firebrand preacher and unionist leader to powersharing Northern Ireland first minister

File photograph shows then Northern Ireland’s First Minister Ian Paisley  in  2008. Photograph: David Moir/Files/Reuters
File photograph shows then Northern Ireland’s First Minister Ian Paisley in 2008. Photograph: David Moir/Files/Reuters

Dr Ian Paisley was probably the most fiery, uncompromising and bellicose Ulster politician throughout the North's Troubles.

But late in life, one of the most turbulent figures in Northern Ireland politics throughout the 20th century underwent a transformation as he agreed to share power with Sinn Féin .

Here is a timeline of some of the main events in his colourful life and career.

Born April 6th 1926. Armagh son of Baptist preacher father and grew up in Ballymena, Co Antrim.

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March 1951. Paisley forms the fundamentalist Free Presbyterian Church after a split with the main Presbyterian Church over opposition to ecumenism

June 1961. Ian Paisley comes to prominence as he leads a protest march against official sympathy messages and flags lowered to half mast for the death of Pope John XXIII

April 1970. Paisley is elected as Protestant Unionist Party MP at Stormont for Bannside in a by-election and in June that year he is elected as MP at Stormont for North Antrim

1971.Paisley co-founds the Democratic Unionist Party of which he is leader until 2008.

May 1974. The DUP leader leads opposition to the Sunningdale agreement including the loyalist workers strike which causes the collapse of the five-month-old power sharing administration

1979. Paisley is elected as a member of the European Parliament for Northern Ireland, a seat he retains until 2004. Among his most dramatic moments as an MEP came in 1988 when he was physically removed from the chamber for heckling the pope during his address, holding up a sign reading 'John Paul II Antichrist'.

December 1985. In protest at the signing of the Anglo-Irish Agreement Ian Paisley resigns his Westminster seat (later re-elected). A month earlier he led an ‘Ulster Says No’ rally against the agreement at Belfast City Hall.

1998. Paisley opposed the Good Friday Agreement which eventually ended the Troubles.

2003. The DUP becomes the largest political party in the Northern Ireland assembly as David Trimble’s UUP loses out. Ian Paisley claims the Good Friday Agreement was “dead and buried”. The DUP’s dominance continues in 2004 Westminster and 2005 local elections.

2006. Despite facing dissent in his party over the St Andrew’s Agreement Dr Paisley signals that he is prepared to enter power with Sinn Féin and that a powersharing agreement was possible in the timeframe set out by the British and Irish governments

May 2007. Paisley is appointed Northern Ireland First Minister with Martin McGuinness as Deputy First Minister leading the powersharing Northern Executive after republicans accepted the new PSNI

February 2008. A controversy over Dr Paisley employing his son as a researcher while he also worked as an Assembly member and junior minister and questions over his son lobbying for property developer leads to the resignation of Ian Paisley Jnr as minister.

May 2008. Paisley steps down as first minister and DUP leader and is succeeded by Peter Robinson.

2010. Paisley steps down froom the House of Commons as an MP for North Antrim after 40 years. He was created a life peer as Lord Bannside in the House of Lords

January 2011 . Paisley, officially ends 65 years of ministry in a retirement service at the Martyrs Memorial Free Presbyterian Church in south Belfast. He also steps down from the Northern Ireland assembly in this year.

2012. Paisley was treated in hospital for an unspecified heart problem.

September 12th, 2014. Ian Paisley’s death is confirmed by his wife Baroness Eileen Paisley. He was aged 88.

Genevieve Carbery

Genevieve Carbery

Genevieve Carbery is Deputy Head of Audience at The Irish Times