Michelle O'Neill on Saturday becomes the first nationalist leader of Northern Ireland's government, when the assembly returns after the end of a two-year boycott by the biggest pro-UK party.
The Sinn Fein politician's nomination will be confirmed at a special sitting of the devolved legislature, which will also see the appointment of a deputy first minister and ministers.
Under the 1998 Good Friday or Belfast Agreement that ended three decades of sectarian violence over British rule in Northern Ireland, the first minister and deputy first minister posts are equal.
But the appointment of a Roman Catholic pro-Irish unity first minister in a nation set up as a Protestant-majority state under British rule is hugely symbolic.
It not only reflects Sinn Fein's position as Northern Ireland's biggest party but also shifting demographics, since the island of Ireland was split into two self-governing entities in 1921.
"Bear in mind, partition itself, the establishment of this state, was on the basis of creating an in-built and permanent unionist (pro-UK) majority," Sinn Fein president Mary Lou McDonald said this week.
"That day has gone," she said, adding that with O'Neill in Belfast, and potentially a Sinn Fein-led government in Dublin at the next election, it could drive "a new constitutional dispensation ending partition".
In the immediate term, O'Neill, 47, faces the pressing problem of fixing budgetary constraints and crumbling public services that have sparked widespread industrial disputes in Northern Ireland.
On Monday, O'Neill, who has promised to be "first minister for all", called the restoration of the assembly "a day of optimism" and called for a joint effort to tackle the problems.
O'Neill has been first minister-designate since May 2022, when Sinn Fein became the largest party at elections for the 90-seat assembly, which sets policy in areas such as housing, employment, health, agriculture and the environment.
But she has been unable to take up the role because of a boycott of the assembly by the largest pro-UK unionist party, the DUP, over post-Brexit trading rules for Northern Ireland.
Northern Ireland's border with the Republic of Ireland to the south is the UK's only land border with the European Union but under the 1998 peace deal it needs to be kept open, without infrastructure.
London struck an agreement with Brussels over Northern Ireland -- in addition to its overall Brexit trade deal.
That accord proposed port checks on goods coming to Northern Ireland from mainland Great Britain -- England, Scotland and Wales.
Unionists, though, said that effectively keeping Northern Ireland in the EU single market and customs union, while the rest of the UK was out, risked cutting it adrift from the rest of the UK, and made a united Ireland more likely.
The DUP finally agreed to a deal with London this week, including the lifting of routine GB-NI checks and what it calls the "Irish Sea border", paving the way for Stormont to return.
The deal also means the UK government will release a GBP3.3-billion ($4.2-billion) package to bolster struggling public services in Northern Ireland, after a series of strikes in recent weeks over pay.
Saturday's formalities begin with the election of a neutral Speaker, then nominations for the parties entitled to jointly lead the decision-making executive, and ministers for nine departments.
The non-aligned third-biggest party, Alliance, has said it will be willing to take the justice portfolio again, and is eligible for another ministry.
The smaller Ulster Unionists are also entitled to a ministerial position but the fifth-largest party, the nationalist SDLP, are not and will form the opposition.
Not everyone in Northern Ireland has welcomed the assembly's return, with smaller, more hardline unionists remaining bitterly opposed and saying the new deal changes nothing.
"We will be fighting this surrender deal. We will not be surrendering our land to the EU," pro-UK activist Mark McKendry told fellow loyalists on Thursday, calling on them to "mobilise" in protest.