Knihobot

Dermot Keogh

    The Lost Decade
    Michael Collins and the Making of the Irish State
    Ireland and Argentina in the Twentieth Century
    Twentieth-Century Ireland
    • Volume 6 in the 'New Gill History of Ireland' series, this book looks at the whole island since partition and examines the performances of the two entities created by the collapse of the old Union. The author traces the establishment and development of the independent Irish state in detail, drawing on his knowledge of Irish government sources.

      Twentieth-Century Ireland
      4,0
    • This is a ground-breaking book filling a void in the study of the history of Ireland's diplomatic relations with Argentina/Latin America from the nineteenth to the twenty first century.

      Ireland and Argentina in the Twentieth Century
    • Michael Collins was one of the important leaders of his age in Irish history. His contribution to the founding of the Irish state was immense even by the standards of a talented generation which included politicians of the calibre of Eamon de Valera, Arthur Griffith, Wiliam T. Cosgrave, Richard Mulcahy, Kevin O'Higgins, Patrick McGilligan, Harry Boland, Sean Lemass, Frank Aiken and Sean MacEntee. Collins has generally been portrayed in writing and film as a revolutionary guerilla leader, a military tactician and a figure of great personal charm, courage and ingenuity. This collection of essays challenges that over-simplified view. It is a professional evaluation of Michael Collins and his contribution to the making of the Irish state, which brings to light his multifaceted and complex character. With contributions from many of the leading historians working in the field, and written in an accessible style, the essays make full use of archival material and provide new findings and insights into the life and times of Michael Collins. The contributions examine COllins as Minister of Finance, his role in intelligence, his policy towards the north, his career as Commander-in-Chief, the origins of the Civil War, his relationship with De Valera, and how academics view his place in Irish history. The collection also included two personal memoirs by Fr Gearoid O'Sullivan and Margot Gearty, nephew and niece of Kitty Kiernan, on Collins and the Kiernans of Granard, County Longford. Both shed new light on Kitty and her remarkable sisters. These essays are an important contribution to an understanding of twentieth-century Ireland.

      Michael Collins and the Making of the Irish State
    • The Lost Decade

      Ireland in the 1950s

      • 326 stránek
      • 12 hodin čtení

      This book brings to light the social, cultural, political and economic complexities and contradictions of Ireland in the 1950s. A decade of creative change and innovation, 'Ireland in the 1950s' seeks to show a society's questioning and searching for solutions to national problems in a decade characterised by high unemployment, poor economic performance, mass emigration and a flight from countryside to the cities

      The Lost Decade