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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... rents; the availability of potato ground for labourers; tithes; evictions; even the dues levied by the Catholic clergy upon their parishioners. Though obviously a disruptive force, it fired its ammunition in a scattered and disjointed ...
... rents; the availability of potato ground for labourers; tithes; evictions; even the dues levied by the Catholic clergy upon their parishioners. Though obviously a disruptive force, it fired its ammunition in a scattered and disjointed ...
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... Rent' consisting of penny-a-month subscriptions from the poor paid outside Catholic chapels to priests who then transmitted the money to headquarters in Dublin. Not only did this raise substantial sums (£16,859 up to March 1825 alone ...
... Rent' consisting of penny-a-month subscriptions from the poor paid outside Catholic chapels to priests who then transmitted the money to headquarters in Dublin. Not only did this raise substantial sums (£16,859 up to March 1825 alone ...
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... Rent and the Waterford mobilization, so, when a by-election was called for County Clare, he at first cast about for some respectable Protestant candidate, and only when none could be found did he agree to stand himself, even though as a ...
... Rent and the Waterford mobilization, so, when a by-election was called for County Clare, he at first cast about for some respectable Protestant candidate, and only when none could be found did he agree to stand himself, even though as a ...
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... rents, an end to evictions, abundant potato ground. Of course O'Connell never actually intended to encourage social revolution, yet the very tone of his orations, the constant harping upon a multitude of grievances, and the apocalyptic ...
... rents, an end to evictions, abundant potato ground. Of course O'Connell never actually intended to encourage social revolution, yet the very tone of his orations, the constant harping upon a multitude of grievances, and the apocalyptic ...
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... rent charge collected from landlords (who could pass it on to most – but not all – tenants), and writing off the large arrears which had accumulated since 1834.61 57 The Act of Union had continued the system by which Ireland was ...
... rent charge collected from landlords (who could pass it on to most – but not all – tenants), and writing off the large arrears which had accumulated since 1834.61 57 The Act of Union had continued the system by which Ireland was ...
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