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The '''Third Dáil''' was the incarnation of [[Dáil Éireann]] that existed from [[
The Third Dáil was elected under the terms of the Irish Free State (Agreement) Act, 1922 which was, in turn, enacted to give effect to the provisions of the [[1921]] [[Anglo-Irish Treaty]] and pave the way for the establishment of the Irish Free State. The [[Constitution of the Irish Free State]] provided, within its own articles, that it would not come into effect until it had been adopted by both the [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|British Parliament]] and the Third Dáil, which it referred to as the "[[Constituent Assembly|constituent assembly]]".
The elections to the Third Dáil took place on
The Third Dáil adopted the Constitution of the Irish Free State on [[25th October]], 1922. The document was then enacted by the British Parliament and came into force on the 6th December. The new constitution used the name ''Dáil Éireann'' for the lower house of a new parliament called the "Oireachtas". However it provided that until the first elections to this new lower house the "constituent assembly" would exercise "all the powers and authorities" conferred on the 'new' Dáil Eireann. The Third Dáil therefore functioned as a legislative lower house from December, 1922 until it was dissolved on
The Fourth Dáil, the first Dáil Éireann of the Irish Free State, was convened one month later in September. In spite of the nomenclature preferred by nationalists, under British constitutional theory it was this first Free State Dáil that was the first legitimate Irish political institution to bear the name "Dáil Éireann".
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