England and Ireland Since 1800Oxford University Press, 1975 - 193 стор. |
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Сторінка 6
... Union saw the rapid emergence of serious disagreement and conflict . There was the matter of the continuance of the Union itself : the repeal agitation of the 1840s represented constitutional pressure towards ending it , the rebellions ...
... Union saw the rapid emergence of serious disagreement and conflict . There was the matter of the continuance of the Union itself : the repeal agitation of the 1840s represented constitutional pressure towards ending it , the rebellions ...
Сторінка 30
... Union aspect . However , the famine and emigration were by no means the only evidence to the Irish that the Union worked against them . Catholic emancipation , envisaged by Pitt in 1800 as a vital part of the Union arrangements , was at ...
... Union aspect . However , the famine and emigration were by no means the only evidence to the Irish that the Union worked against them . Catholic emancipation , envisaged by Pitt in 1800 as a vital part of the Union arrangements , was at ...
Сторінка 64
... Union . Irish nationalists were no less convinced that their kind of Ireland depended for its future on the severance or at least modification of the Union . For them , the Union had come to be seen as the fount of all Irish evils ...
... Union . Irish nationalists were no less convinced that their kind of Ireland depended for its future on the severance or at least modification of the Union . For them , the Union had come to be seen as the fount of all Irish evils ...
Зміст
Matters of History | 1 |
Images | 18 |
Pride and Prejudice | 47 |
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1916 rebellion accept agitation Anglo-Irish relations Anglo-Irish war argument assumption basic became Belfast believed Brian Friel Britain Catholic emancipation Catholicism Church civilization claims coercion concessions conflict Conservative conviction depiction Dublin economic effect emigration England England and Ireland English attitudes English government English image English political English politicians English rule English view Englishmen existence fact famine fear Fenian force grievances hatred Home Rule hostility ignorance image of Ireland interpretation Irish affairs Irish Catholics Irish history Irish land Irish nationalism Irish nationalists Irish peasant Irish policy Irish question Irish situation Irish violence Irishmen issue J. S. Mill landlords Liberals London Lord major matter moral nationalist Ireland nineteenth century Northern Ireland particularly party peasantry Popery poverty prejudice principles problems Protestant radical reality reform regard relationship between England religion religious response revolution sectarian Sinn Fein social society tactic threat Tory traditional Ulster Unionist Party Ulster Unionists Union unrest