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Nick Maxwell

Eoin O’Duffy’s Blueshirts and the Abyssinian crisis

Despite a growing body of historical writing on the life of General Eoin O’Duffy, there are still large gaps in our knowledge of this enigmatic figure. His various roles as organiser par excellence in the GAA, Irish Volunteers, Garda Síochána and, of course, as head of the Irish Brigade during the Spanish Civil War, are … Read more

Categories 20th-century / Contemporary History, Features, Issue 2 (Summer 2002), Volume 10

‘A Lying Old Scoundrel’

It is a popular belief that while slavery was at its height in eighteenth-century England, Ireland remained untarnished and uninvolved. Although it is true that ports like Belfast and Dublin, unlike Bristol and Liverpool, did not become prosperous on the back of slavery, it is still difficult to believe that Ireland could have remained untouched … Read more

Categories 18th–19th - Century History, Features, Issue 1 (Spring 2003), Volume 11

A Non-Famine History of Ireland?

Is it possible to write famine out of Irish history? Note, the question refers to ‘famine’, not the ‘Great Famine’. The catastrophe of 1845-49 was unlike any previous famine. In the words of Peter Solar it ‘was no ordinary subsistence crisis’. Its singularity notwithstanding, Ireland’s story is often told with famine as a fugue running … Read more

Categories 18th–19th - Century History, Features, Issue 2 (Summer 2002), The Famine, Volume 10

Pasteboard Perceptions

In 1853 Aristide Bouciclaut—no apparent relation of the Irish playwright—hit upon a novel way of publicising his modest drapery shop, trading as Bon Marché, in the Rue de Sèvres in Paris. He produced an attractive card, printed by the relatively new process of chromolithography, depicting an elegantly aristocratic figure paying his respects to a blushing … Read more

Categories 18th–19th - Century History, Features, Issue 2 (Summer 2002), Volume 10

‘That Zealous & Learned Prelate’

At 11 o’clock on the morning of Thursday 23 June 1642 General Garrett Barry and other leading members of the Catholic army of Munster were admitted to the castle of Limerick. The ancient fort (known today as King John’s Castle) had been closely besieged for the past five weeks until the hungry and sick men … Read more

Categories Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 2 (Summer 2002), Volume 10
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