England and Ireland Since 1800Oxford University Press, 1975 - 193 стор. |
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Сторінка 70
... Irishman , I should be ( in heart ) a rebel , ' he wrote in 1887. Others exposed to the shock of that hatred did not understand it and were horrified and indignant , for they could see no real cause or justification for it . In some ...
... Irishman , I should be ( in heart ) a rebel , ' he wrote in 1887. Others exposed to the shock of that hatred did not understand it and were horrified and indignant , for they could see no real cause or justification for it . In some ...
Сторінка 71
... Irishmen made such a distinction . More likely is the truth of T.P. O'Connor's observation that " To the Irishman who has never left the Irish shores , the Englishman , by a fallacious generalization , was embodied , not in his own ...
... Irishmen made such a distinction . More likely is the truth of T.P. O'Connor's observation that " To the Irishman who has never left the Irish shores , the Englishman , by a fallacious generalization , was embodied , not in his own ...
Сторінка 168
... Irishmen , self- contained as it were , but in the rest of Ireland violence was directed against English rule and its adjuncts , particularly landlordism . It could well be argued that for almost the entirety of the nineteenth century ...
... Irishmen , self- contained as it were , but in the rest of Ireland violence was directed against English rule and its adjuncts , particularly landlordism . It could well be argued that for almost the entirety of the nineteenth century ...
Зміст
Matters of History | 1 |
Images | 18 |
Pride and Prejudice | 47 |
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England and Ireland Since 1800 Patrick O'Farrell,Patrick James O'Farrell Перегляд фрагмента - 1975 |
Загальні терміни та фрази
1916 rebellion accept agitation Anglo-Irish relations Anglo-Irish war argument assumption basic became Belfast believed Britain Catholic emancipation Catholicism Church civilization claims coercion concessions conflict conservatism Conservative continued 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 economy Irish history Irish land Irish nationalism Irish nationalists Irish peasantry Irish policy Irish question Irish situation Irish violence Irishmen issue J.S. Mill landlords Liberals London Lord Lord Salisbury major matter moral nationalist Ireland nineteenth century Northern Ireland particularly party peasant 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 Unionism Ulster Unionists Union unrest