Plus ça change?

Epidemic disease and social reaction By Laurence Geary “Fear, mass panic and hysteria were features of all serious outbreaks of fever, cholera and other communicable diseases in early modern and modern Ireland.” In the past, disease epidemics in Ireland provoked a very powerful social reaction, particularly outbreaks of the country’s deadliest infections: bacillary dysentery, cholera, … Read more

The Battle of Culloden

The Irish connection By Stephen McGarry “Charles Edward Stuart, grandson of the deposed King James II, believed that his time had come to restore the deposed Catholic dynasty to the throne that they had lost in the ‘Glorious Revolution’ of 1688.” On 16 April 1746, a cold, tired and hungry Scottish Jacobite army stood on … Read more

St Patrick in Italy

The fresco of St Patrick’s Purgatory and ‘St Patrick’s Well’ in Umbria By Brenda Moore-McCann “It is probably the first, the largest and the most complex artistic representation of Purgatory and the St Patrick legend in existence.” In 1998, while on an art history research trip to Italy, I came across a spectacular sixteenth-century well … Read more

Understanding our own ignorance

The search for truth and the revision of Irish history By Patrick Maume In the July/August 2020 issue of History Ireland Dr Fergal Mac Bloscaidh, whose research on Tyrone politics in the early twentieth century is well respected, offers thoughts on revisionist history. This might have been a welcome intervention, because the debate on ‘revisionism’ … Read more