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Vol 38 n 149 2012 | Vol. 38 n 151 2013 | vol. 38 n 152 2013 | vol. 39 n 153 2014 | vol. 39 n 154 2014 | vol. 39 n 155 2015 | vol. 39 n 156 2015 |
Titre : | Irish Historical Studies : Périodique numérique et imprimé vol. 39 n 153 - 2014 |
Type de document : | Bulletin |
Paru le : | 01/01/2014 |
Dépouillements
Article
Timothy D. WATT, Auteur
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Even though violent popular protest was a common feature of life in early eighteenth century Dublin, the riots that broke out in 1729 were exceptionally severe and long-lasting and resulted in the ...
Article
Fintan LANE, Auteur
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Historians of socialist thought have rated the Irish political philosopher and radical economist William Thompson (1778-1833) as the most influential theorist to emerge from the Owenite movement in...
Article
Mark EMPEY, Auteur
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At first glance the low yield of books produced by the Dublin printing presses for circulation in early Stuart Ireland could lead to two hasty conclusions: first, that Irish society was unreceptive...
Article
Michael J. TURNER, Auteur
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Chartism, though weak in Ireland, was the most significant popular political mobilisation in the nineteenth-century Britain. Among its main architects was the Irish-born radical journalist and orat...
Article
Caoimhin DE BARRA, Auteur
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Throughout the Irish cultural revival of the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Wales was held up as an example by some Irish nationalists of how a nation could revive its traditional ...
Article
Peter SMYTH, Auteur
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In 1959 the Ulster Unionist Party (U.U.P) abandoned the idea that relations between the government in Belfast and the two main parties in Westminster should be maintained with a semblance of impart...
Article
Stuart C. AVEYARD, Auteur
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In May 1974 the Ulster Workers' Council (U.W.C), comprising loyalist trade unionists, paramilitaries and politicians, mounted a general strike backed by widespread intimidation. Their target was th...