The Irish Revolution at the beginning of the twentieth century spawned the creation of the modern Irish state. This is the first full length analysis to offer a comprehensive framework of that revolution in its totality, taking into account the broad range of social, economic and political developments as well as the IRA's campaign of guerrilla warfare and the British response to it. Drawing on such previously unpublished sources as the Irish Department of Defense's Military History Bureau, the author paints a broad picture of the people and the key events in the Irish struggle for independence. The book also breaks new ground in presenting much of the behind the scenes debate within the British Government in the prosecution of its policies in response to the revolt in Ireland. British official frustration provoked by the acceptance of D���¡il Eireann by the majority of the Irish people and the independent institutions it sought to set in place is also explicitly chronicled. New light is shed on the Anglo-Irish Treaty negotiations as well as on the divisions within Irish nationalism before and indeed afterwards which culminated in the Irish Civil War. The role of external forces including public opinion in the United States and British competing obligations at home and abroad are also covered. Considerable attention is given to the development of democratic government in the fledgling Irish Free State in the midst of domestic upheaval, and to the broader effort at nation building which followed after the Civil War.
Smith , J. Making the Peace in Ireland ( Edinburgh and London : Pearson Education Ltd , 2002 ) . Social Democratic and Labour Party , Agreed Statement from John Hume and Gerry Adams ( Belfast : SDLP , 25 Sept. 1993 ) .
Murphy , Ireland in the Twentieth Century , p . 107 . 58. Chubb , B. The Politics of the Irish Constitution ( Dublin : Institute of Public Administration , 1991 ) , p . 16 . 59. Lyons , F.S.L. Culture and Anarchy in Ireland 1890–1939 ...
Although the satirical and comic drive of McDonagh's revivalist modernist play seems – as might his A Skull in Connemara – to exist on the basis of racist stereotypes like the 'ugly pugnacious ape-like cartoon figures of individual ...
Thomas 71 Fitzserald, 32 Fitzgerald, 'Colonel, 60 Fulton, Robert 83 Gallagher, Lieutenant, 102 Gallagher, Rev. Dr., 122 Gallagher, R 145 Gillespie, Captain 160 Gorman, Major 160 Hand, Adj. General, 48 Hogan, .
“ Shellshock and the psychologist , in W. Bynum , R. Porter and M. Shepard ( eds ) , The Anatomy of Madness : Essays in the History of Psychiatry . Vol . II , Institutions and Society . London : Tavistock . Sukla , J. A. ( ed . ) ...
Northern Ireland 1921-1974, a Select Bibliography
A Guide to Irish Parish Registers
One of the greatest success stories ever told unfolds in the pages of this compelling, three-dimensional book. Through intimate letters, journals, and diaries of actual immigrants, Journey of Hope chronicles...
Traces the history of the struggles of the Irish from the time of Brian Boru, focusing particularly on contemporary terrorism in Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic and offering possible...
The Royal Historical Society's Annual Bibliography of British and Irish History provides a comprehensive and authoritative survey of books and articles on historical topics published in a single calendar year....