Browsing History (Scholarly Articles) by Author "|~|"
Now showing items 1-20 of 20
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'Ah, Ireland, the caring nation': foreign aid and Irish state identity in the long 1970s
O'Sullivan, Kevin (Cambridge University Press, 2013-05)On a plane leaving Baidoa refugee camp in Somalia in late 1992, an Arab doctor offered John O'Shea, head of the relief agency Goal, a glimpse of how the Irish were viewed in that civil war-ravaged state. ‘Ah, Ireland’, he ... -
Between internationalism and empire: Ireland, the 'Like-Minded' group, and the search for a new international order, 1974-82
O'Sullivan, Kevin (Taylor & Francis (Routledge), 2015-07-31)This article examines the response of a group of small and medium-sized states to the Global South's demands for a new international economic order in the 1970s and early 1980s. Reading that experience through the eyes of ... -
A Catholic model of martyrdom in the Post-Reformation era: the Bishop in Seventeenth-Century France
Forrestal, Alison (Taylor & Francis, 2005)By the seventeenth century, episcopal martyrdom was an established reality and ideal throughout the Catholic church. Bishops could pay homage to the celebrated prelates of the early church who had gone bravely to their ... -
The English Pale: 'a failed entity'?
Ellis, Steven G. (Wordwell Ltd., 2011-03)It is hardly surprising that Irish historians have been reluctant to engage with negative later medieval English perceptions of Ireland (see sidebar below), other than to impugn their veracity. In regard to the English ... -
'Fathers, Leaders, Kings': episcopacy and episcopal reform in the seventeenth-century French School
Forrestal, Alison (Taylor & Francis, 2002)In their drive to ‘sanctify’ the clergy, seventeenth-century French clerical reformers developed highly sophisticated and influential theologies of both priesthood and episcopacy. This article traces the development of the ... -
Humanitarian encounters: Biafra, NGOs and imaginings of the Third World in Britain and Ireland, 1967-70
O'Sullivan, Kevin (Taylor & Francis, 2014-08-21)This article examines the influence of the Biafran humanitarian crisis on British and Irish conceptions of the Third World. Drawing on evidence from NGOs in both countries, it argues that the explosion of non-governmental ... -
Irish entrants to the Congregation of the Mission, 1625-60
Forrestal, Alison (Saint Patrick's College Maynooth & NUI Maynooth, 2009)[No abstract available] -
James F. Kenney on early Irish history as a field of research by American students
Ó Cróinín, Dáibhí (2015)On the last day of 1930, James F. Kenney (author of the famous Sources for the Early History of Ireland) issued a clarion call to scholars in America to take up the study of early Irish history, and presented an agenda of ... -
Making Bishops in Tridentine France: The Episcopal Ideal of Jean-Pierre Camus
Forrestal, Alison (Cambridge University Press, 2003-05-13)The experience of Jean-Pierre Camus, a reforming bishop in seventeenth-century France, highlights the problematic ambivalences present within French Catholic reform after the Council of Trent: the persistent tensions between ... -
Namur Citadel, 1695: A Case Study in Allied Siege Tactics
Lenihan, Padraig (SAGE Publications, 2011)Year after year Louis XIV's armies thrust through Brabant in the eastern part of the Spanish Netherlands, the biggest theatre of the Nine Years' War (1689-97). These thrusts followed the general line of the rivers Sambre ... -
Old languages in a new country: publishing and reading in the Celtic languages in nineteenth-century Australia
Ó Ciosáin, Niall (2011)The history of the Irish language in nineteenth-century Australia, and of its use among Irish immigrants, is not very clear. On the one hand, Patrick O’Farrell has maintained that the Irish were overwhelmingly anglophone ... -
The print cultures of the Celtic languages, 1700–1900
Ó Ciosáin, Niall (Taylor & Francis (Routledge), 2015-05-01)While the cultural trajectories of the Celtic language communities have some broad similarities in the long term, their histories in the medium term were quite different. The article approaches this issue through a comparative ... -
Revisiting sacred propaganda: the Holy Bishop in the seventeenth-century Jansenist quarrel
Forrestal, Alison (Taylor & Francis, 2004)In the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, prelates such as Borromeo of Milan and de Sales of Geneva, began to reinvigorate this hierarchical office, offering models of episcopal government, discipline and pastorate ... -
The search for justice: NGOs in Britain and Ireland and the New International Economic Order, 1968-82
O'Sullivan, Kevin (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015)The rapid expansion of the international humanitarian NGO community in the long 1970s brought with it much soul-searching on how NGOs could move beyond charity and towards genuine solidarity with the Third World. Drawing ... -
Slavery on the frontier: the report of a French missionary on mid-seventeenth-century Tunis
Forrestal, Alison; Roşu, Felicia (Taylor & Francis, 2012)This document is a report sent in 1654 by Jean Le Vacher, member of the Congregation of the Mission, vicar apostolic of the Holy See and acting French consul in Tunis, to the cardinals of the Congregation for the Propagation ... -
Suicide in Early Modern and Modern Europe
Healy, Róisín (Cambridge University Press, 2006-09)This is a review of recent English- and German-language publications on suicide, both as an act and a subject of discourse, in the early and late modern periods. It argues that, while publications on the theme have increased ... -
Venues for clerical formation in Catholic Reformation Paris: Vincent de Paul and the Tuesday Conference and Company
Forrestal, Alison (Western Society for French History, 2010)In the eulogy he delivered at Vincent de Paul's memorial service in November 1660, the bishop of Puy, Henri Maupas du Tour, praised his subject for having "virtually changed the face of the Church by Conferences, by ... -
Vincent de Paul as mentor
Forrestal, Alison (Vincentian Studies Institute of the United States, 2008)In September 1626, Vincent de Paul and three companions signed an act of association that described the common work that they had been performing over a period of several years and presented a promisE' from each man that ... -
Vincent de Paul: The principles and practices of government, 1625-60
Forrestal, Alison (Vincentian Studies Institute of the United States, 2009)[No abstract available] -
Woman's Life magazine and women’s lives in Ireland in the 1950s
Clear, Caitriona (Irish Labour History Society, 2013)[No abstract available]