Lecture Twelve Wednesday 27th April

Review of Course

 

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Section 1: General

T. W. Moody, F.X. Martin, F.J. Byrne, (eds), New History of Ireland iii: early modern Ireland (Oxford, 1976) Relevant Chapters

T.W. Moody (ed) A new history of Ireland IV: eighteenth-century Ireland, 1691-1800 (Oxford, 1998). Relevant Chapters

Raymond Gillespie, Destabilizing Ulster, 1641-2’, in Brian MacCuarta (ed.), Ulster 1641: aspects of the rising (Belfast, 1993).

Aidan Clarke, ‘The genesis of the Ulster rising of 1641’, in Peter Roebuck (ed.), Plantation to partition: essays in Ulster history in honour of J.L. McCracken (Belfast, 1981).

J. Kelly, ‘The origins of the Act of Union: an examination of unionist opinion in Britain and Ireland, 1650-1800’, in Irish Historical Studies, xxv, (1986).

Jacqueline Hill, ‘Historical reviews: convergence and conflict in eighteenth-century Ireland’, Historical Journal, 44, 4, (2001).

 T.C. Barnard, ‘Historical Review: farewell to old Ireland’, Historical Journal, 36, 4, (1993).

 

Section 2:  The Flight of the Earls

T. W. Moody, F.X. Martin, F.J. Byrne, (eds), New History of Ireland iii: early modern Ireland (Oxford, 1976) Relevant Chapters

John McCavitt, ‘The political background to the Ulster plantation, 1607-1620’, in Brian MacCuarta (ed.), Ulster 1641: aspects of the rising (Belfast, 1993).

N.P. Canny,  ‘The Flight of the Earls, 1607’, Irish Historical Studies, xvii (1971), pp 380-99.

 Steven G. Ellis, ‘The collapse of the Gaelic world, 1450-1650’, Irish Historical Studies, xxxi, (1999).

Contemporary extracts from the State Papers showing;  (1) Contemporary government accounts of the Flight of the Earls. (2) Tyrone and Tyrconnell’s declaration of grievances These are on reserve.

Hiram Morgan, ‘The end of Gaelic Ulster: a thematic interpretation of events between 1534 and 1610’, Irish Historical Studies, xxvi (1988), pp 8-32.

N.P. Canny, ‘Hugh O’Neill and the changing face of Gaelic Ulster’, Studia Hibernica, x (1970), pp 7-35

 

Section 3: Restoration Ireland

T. W. Moody, F.X. Martin, F.J. Byrne, (eds), New History of Ireland iii: early modern Ireland (Oxford, 1976) Relevant Chapters

McKenny, Kevin, ‘The seventeenth century land settlement in Ireland: towards a statistical interpretation’, in Jane Ohlmeyer (ed.), From independence to occupation: Ireland, 1641-1660 (Cambridge, 1995), pp 181-200.

Bottigheimer, Karl S., ‘The restoration land settlement in Ireland: a structural view’, Irish Historical Studies, xviii (1972), pp 1-21.

Arnold, L.J., ‘The Irish court of claims of 1663’, Irish Historical Studies, xxiv (1985), pp 417-30.

McKenny, Kevin, ‘Charles II’s Irish cavaliers: the 1649 officers and the Restoration land settlement’, Irish Historical Studies,  xxviii (1993), pp 409-25.

Monica Brennan, ‘The changing composition of Kilkenny landowners, 1641-1700’, in William Nolan and Kevin Whelan (eds), Kilkenny history and society (Dublin 1990).

 

Section 4: Williamite Ireland

T. W. Moody, F.X. Martin, F.J. Byrne, (eds), New History of Ireland iii: early modern Ireland (Oxford, 1976) Relevant Chapters

Patrick Kelly, ‘Ireland and the Glorious Revolution: from kingdom to colony’, in  Robert Beddard (ed.), The revolutions of 1688: the Andrew Browning lectures 1988 (Oxford, 1991).

 D.W. Hayton, ‘The Williamite Revolution in Ireland, 1688-91’, in Jonathan I. Israel (ed.), The Anglo-Dutch moment: essays on the Glorious Revolution and its world impact (Cambridge)

Raymond Gillespie, The Irish protestants and James II’ in Irish Historical Studies, xxviii (1992).

John Miller, ‘The earl of Tyrconnell and James II’s Irish policy’ in Historical Journal xx, (1977)

 

Section 5: The Penal Laws

T.W. Moody (ed) A new history of Ireland IV: eighteenth-century Ireland, 1691-1800 (Oxford, 1998). Relevant Chapters

Charles McGrath, ‘Securing the Protestant interest: the origins and purpose of the penal laws of 1695’ in Irish Historical Studies xxx (1997).

 Maureen Wall, ‘The penal laws, 1691-1760’ in Gerard O’Brien and Tom Dunne (eds.), Catholic Ireland in the Eighteenth Century: collected essays of Maureen Wall

L.M. Cullen, ‘Catholics under the Penal Laws’, in Eighteenth Century Ireland, (1986).

W.N. Osborough, ‘Catholics, land and the Popery Acts of Anne’, in T.P. Power and Kevin Whelan (eds.), Endurance and Emergence: Catholics in Ireland in the eighteenth century (Dublin, 1990).

Louis M. Cullen, ‘Catholic Social Classes under the penal laws’ in T.P. Power and Kevin Whelan (eds), Endurance and Emergence: Catholics in Ireland in the eighteenth century (1990).

 

Section 6: Colonial Nationalism

T.W. Moody (ed) A new history of Ireland IV: eighteenth-century Ireland, 1691-1800 (Oxford, 1998). Relevant Chapters

Joseph McMinn, ‘A weary patriot: Swift and the formation of an Anglo-Irish identity’, Eighteenth Century Ireland

P. Kelly, ‘Archbishop William King and colonial nationalism’ in C. Brady (ed), Worsted in the game: losers in Irish history (Dublin, 1989).

P. McNally, ‘Woods halfpence, Carteret and the government of Ireland’ in Irish Historical Studies, xxx (1997).

 

Section 7: The Catholic Question

T.W. Moody (ed) A new history of Ireland IV: eighteenth-century Ireland, 1691-1800 (Oxford, 1998). Relevant Chapters

Thomas Bartlett, ‘The origins and progress of the Catholic Question in Ireland, 1690-1800’, in T.P. Power and Kevin Whelan (eds), Endurance and Emergence: Catholics in Ireland in the eighteenth century (Dublin, 1990).

E. O’Flaherty, ‘Ecclesiastical Politics and there dismantling of the penal laws in Ireland, 1774-82’, Irish Historical Studies xxvi (1988-9).

J.R. Hill, ‘Religious toleration and the relaxation of the penal laws: an imperial perspective’, Archivium Hibernicium, 44, (1989).

R.K. Donovan, ‘The military origins of the Roman Catholic relief programme in 1778’, in Historical Journal, xxviii, (1985).

 

Section 8 United Irishmen

T.W. Moody (ed) A new history of Ireland IV: eighteenth-century Ireland, 1691-1800 (Oxford, 1998) Relevant Chapters

J.S. Donnelly, ‘Propagating the cause of the United Irishmen’, in Studies, lxix, (1980).

Nancy J. Curtain, ‘The transformation of the Society of the United Irishmen into a mass based revolutionary organisation, 1794-6’, Irish Historical Studies, xxiv, no 96 (Nov. 1995).

 

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