Ireland since 1800: Conflict and ConformityThe second edition of this bestselling survey of modern Irish history covers social, religious as well as political history and offers a distinctive combination of chronological and thematic approaches. |
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... Protestant minorities IV. Ambiguities PART TWO Winners and Losers: From Famine to Partition 4. Society Agricola Victor I. The post-Famine countryside II. Landlords and tenants III. Land agitation and farmers' triumph IV. Rural values ...
... Protestant minorities IV. Ambiguities PART TWO Winners and Losers: From Famine to Partition 4. Society Agricola Victor I. The post-Famine countryside II. Landlords and tenants III. Land agitation and farmers' triumph IV. Rural values ...
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... III. New beginnings IV. False prosperities V. Out of the depths 9. Religion Piety and Its Spoils I. A quasi-clericalist state? II. Education again III. Protestant perceptions IV. 'Mother and child' V. Catholicism and choppy seas VI.
... III. New beginnings IV. False prosperities V. Out of the depths 9. Religion Piety and Its Spoils I. A quasi-clericalist state? II. Education again III. Protestant perceptions IV. 'Mother and child' V. Catholicism and choppy seas VI.
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... Protestant Telegraph could, for example, have harboured any doubts as to either the meaning or the source of the staccato headline: 'The Pope's Order, Murder Queen Elizabeth'.2 1 Stewart 1977: 15. 2 Hickey 1984: 67. The headline was ...
... Protestant Telegraph could, for example, have harboured any doubts as to either the meaning or the source of the staccato headline: 'The Pope's Order, Murder Queen Elizabeth'.2 1 Stewart 1977: 15. 2 Hickey 1984: 67. The headline was ...
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... Protestant ecclesiastics were ever united as to political action or ideology. At times, indeed, only liberal doses of rhetoric could paper over the cracks which again and again opened up within the repeal movement, the Home Rule ...
... Protestant ecclesiastics were ever united as to political action or ideology. At times, indeed, only liberal doses of rhetoric could paper over the cracks which again and again opened up within the repeal movement, the Home Rule ...
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... Protestant Irish parliament in 1778, 1782, and 1793, which broadly allowed Catholics to hold land in the normal way and eventually granted them the vote, were actually imposed by the British government, so that articulate Catholics ...
... Protestant Irish parliament in 1778, 1782, and 1793, which broadly allowed Catholics to hold land in the normal way and eventually granted them the vote, were actually imposed by the British government, so that articulate Catholics ...
Contents
Religion The Birthpangs of Modernity | |
Society Agricola Victor | |
Politics Nationalism and Localism | |
Religion Triumphs and Stockades | |
Politics An Island Now Formally Divided | |
Society Stagnation Boom Slump Boom | |
Religion Piety and Its Spoils | |
Mother and child | |
Index | |
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Common terms and phrases
administration agrarian Anglo-Irish became Belfast bishops Britain British Catholic Catholicism cent century Church of Ireland clergy clerical Connacht Connolly constituted contemporary Corish Cork Cullen cultural Cumann na nGaedheal Dail Daly Daniel O’Connell decades developments Donnelly Dublin ecclesiastical Economic and Social Economic History effective election electoral emigration Famine farming favour Fenian Fianna Fail Fine Gael Fitzpatrick Gaelic Garvin Home Rule Hoppen important increasingly industry Irish Agriculture Irish Historical Studies Irish Political Kennedy labourers land landlords Larkin leaders League less Liberal ministers movement nationalist nineteenth Nineteenth-Century Ireland Northern Ireland notably Ó Gráda O’Brien O’Connell O’Connell’s O’Neill Orange Order Oxford Parliamentary Party Parnell Parnell’s popular population post-Famine pre-Famine priests prosperous Protestant proved reform religious remained rents Republic republican rural sectarian Sinn Fein substantial success Taoiseach tenants Ulster Union unionists United Irishmen United Kingdom Valera Vaughan violence W.B. Yeats Whyte Young Irelanders