Adresse
Centre Culturel Irlandaiscontact
Mots-clés
Documents disponibles dans cette catégorie (143)
Ajouter les résultats au panier Affiner la recherche
Livre
The Trinity College Library is one of the world's great research libraries, with the largest and finest collection of books and manuscripts. Lively and informative compilation with "The Book of Kel...Livre
This book is a comprehensive study of the problems which the city of Dublin faced between the famine and World War One.Livre
Dublin is the only city in the world to produce three Nobel Prize winners for literature. An indication that something remarkable was taking place, not only in the capital but in the whole country,...Livre
Contents : I. The legacy of the nineteenth century: 1 Dear Dirty Dublin; II. The City: 2 The Faded Capital; 3 Politics and the Dublin Corporation; 4 Public Health; 5 Housing; III. The People: 6 Pov...Livre
Ian FINLAY, Photographe ; Mike BUNN, Auteur ; James PLUNKETT, Préfacier, etc. | [S.l.] : Dublin Corporation | 1976Livre
Maurice Gorham has assembled a collection of pictures which show Dublin City and Dublin life as they were in the nineteenth century and at the beginning of the twentieth cenuryLivre
Richard M. KAIN, Auteur | Norman : University of Oklahoma Press | Center of Civilizations Series | 1962Dublin has been the liveliest literary center of the twentieth century, producing the best poet (Willam Butler Yeats), the best novelist (James Joyce), and the best playwright (John Millington Syng...Livre
Périodique : Revue, journal
The title ‘The Dublin Evening Post’ has been used several times during the early 17th – 19th century. The newspaper was an incredibly influential title distributed throughout all the main towns of ...Périodique : Revue, journal
The Dublin Journal was sometimes prefixed by "Faulkner's," or by "Faulkners Faulkner II was publisher into the early nineteenth century, but John Giffard purchased the paper in 1788. Giffard tran...Périodique : Revue, journal
The First edition of the Evening Herald was published on the 19th December 1891. The Evening Herald made its entrance on to Irish streets by boldly stating “To the public…. The Herald has come to f...