One of the most important and complicated problems of the late Victorian era was that of IrishHomeRule. Essentially the problem was that a great many landowners in Ireland were English absentees, which is to say they never (or rarely) visited their landholdings, never improved them, and generally maltreated their tenants. As Ireland suffered famine, poverty, and various forms of depression, this naturally caused a great deal of resentment and anger. Coupled to this, of course, was the fact that most tenants were Catholics and most landlords Protestants. Ultimately, the "Irish Question" and its generally poor handling in this period led to IrishFenian and other terrorist attacks, as for example the PhoenixParkMurders, and led to the situation we still see today in Northern Ireland.