England and Ireland Since 1800 |
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Сторінка 55
... Irish themselves . Sean O ' Faolain once observed that “ The greatest curse of
Ireland . . . has been the exaggeration of Irish virtue - our stubbornness ,
conservatism , enormous - arrogance our pride of resistance , our _ capacity 55 )
qualities.
... Irish themselves . Sean O ' Faolain once observed that “ The greatest curse of
Ireland . . . has been the exaggeration of Irish virtue - our stubbornness ,
conservatism , enormous - arrogance our pride of resistance , our _ capacity 55 )
qualities.
Сторінка 92
The Irish Land League , aside from its central position in sustaining resistance to
English law and order , had a programme which rejected basic and orthodox
English concepts of property rights and rent payment . Then there was the
appalling ...
The Irish Land League , aside from its central position in sustaining resistance to
English law and order , had a programme which rejected basic and orthodox
English concepts of property rights and rent payment . Then there was the
appalling ...
Сторінка 111
In such circumstances , where peasant Ireland was wedded to old ways and
deeply resistant to changing them , any form of attempted agrarian modernization
was sure to encounter peasant resistance . So , Ireland ' s resistance to England
in ...
In such circumstances , where peasant Ireland was wedded to old ways and
deeply resistant to changing them , any form of attempted agrarian modernization
was sure to encounter peasant resistance . So , Ireland ' s resistance to England
in ...
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Matters of History | 1 |
Images | 18 |
Pride and Prejudice | 79 |
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accept achieve affairs Anglo-Irish relations argument aspect attention attitudes basic became become believed Britain British Catholic Catholicism cause character church civilization claims common concerned concessions condition consequences Conservative constitution continued dangerous determined direct economic effect element England English Englishmen eventually existence experience extreme fact famine fear force held Home Rule human idea ignorance important industrial interests interpretation Irish nationalists Irish question Irishmen issue land least less Liberals Lord major matter merely mind moral movement nature necessary nineteenth century Northern Ireland opinion particularly party past peasant political politicians position possible poverty practice prejudice present principles problems produced Protestant reality reasons reform regard relations relationship religion religious remained resistance response seemed seen situation social society taken things threat took tradition Ulster understanding Union Unionists violence