Catholics of Consequence: Transnational Education, Social Mobility, and the Irish Catholic Elite 1850-1900For as far back as school registers can take us, the most prestigious education available to any Irish child was to be found outside Ireland. Catholics of Consequence traces, for the first time, the transnational education, careers, and lives of more than two thousand Irish boys and girls whoattended Catholic schools in England, France, Belgium, and elsewhere in the second half of the nineteenth century. There was a long tradition of Irish Anglicans and Catholics sending their children abroad for the majority of their formative years. However, as the cultural nationalism of the Irishrevival at the end of the nineteenth century took root, Irish Catholics who sent their children to school in Britain were accused of a pro-Britishness that crystallized into still recognisable terms of insult such as West Briton, Castle Catholic, Squireen, and Seoinin. This concept has an enduringresonance in Ireland, but very few publications have ever interrogated it.Catholics of Consequence marks the first ever attempt to analyse the education and subsequent lives of the Irish children that received this type of transnational education. It also tells the story of elite education in Ireland, where schools such as Clongowes Wood and Castleknock College wererooted in the continental Catholic tradition, but also looked to public schools in England as exemplars. Taken together it tells the story of an Irish Catholic elite at once integrated and segregated within what was then the most powerful state in the world. |
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Catholics of Consequence: Transnational Education, Social Mobility, and the ... Ciaran O'Neill No preview available - 2016 |
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Ampleforth Beaumont College became Benedictine Blackrock College boarding schools boys attending Britain British career Castleknock College Catholic education Catholic families Catholic schools cent Clongowes Wood Clongowes Wood College Clongownian cohort College Archives Continental Cork cricket Daniel O’Connell Deputy Lieutenant Douai Dublin Education in Ireland elite education elite schools English Benedictine Congregation English Catholic English public schools English schools Eton father figure France Freeman’s Journal French gentry hierarchy History Intermediate Education Irish boys Irish Catholic Irish Catholic elite Irish College Irish education Irish girls Irish schools Irish-born James Jesuit John landed landowners later Lieutenant Limerick London Lord majority middle-class military Munster Murphy National nineteenth century O’Brien O’Connell O’Connor Oratory School Oscott Oxford Paris past pupils political priests Protestant Queen’s Queen’s Colleges religious Sacred Heart social mobility Society Sodality sport St Edmund’s St Leonards status Stonyhurst College Studies tion transnational Tullabeg University William Delany