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Displaying Results 1 - 25 of 5089 on page 1 of 204
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (1)
(1999)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (1)
(1999)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
The study of history is a well established discipline. For over sixty years teachers and students of history have been served by Irish Historical Studies which has set the standard for most professional writing of history in Ireland. In recent years historians have opted to answer new needs by publishing new publications such as the Irish Economic and Social History Journal and History Ireland. Irish universities too, have a well earned reputation in fostering historical analysis and scholarship. The University of Limerick History Society, established in 1997, devoted itself to promoting the study of history within the University. With the active support of Dr. Bernadette Whelan and the history faculty the Society grew to become one of the most active groups on campus. At its foundation, members of the History Society adopted the idea of producing a journal dedicated to publishing both undergraduate and postgraduate work. In conjunction with this. members of the Society thought it a...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3677
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (7)
(2006)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (7)
(2006)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
The quality and diversity of the contributions to volume seven of History Studies is indicative of the niche which the journal has established in the field of academic publishing as the sole post-graduate produced history periodical in Ireland. The broad compass of historical research being conducted at undergraduate, post-graduate and post-doctoral levels is reflected in the content of this volume. Last year, volume six marked a new and highly successful departure for History Studies with the introduction of a book review section and the establishment of an annual forum. This edition consolidates these developments as well as expanding the scope of the journal to incorporate an archival profile of Special Collections at the University of Limerick. It is envisaged that this will become a standard feature of future editions. The History Studies forum has taken its lead from progressive independent initiatives such as the annual Irish History Students' Association Conference and ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3683
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (2)
(2000)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (2)
(2000)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
Building on the success of History Studies. volume one, we are happy to introduce this second volume of history containing the work of students from around Ireland. The collection presents the work of both undergraduate and postrgraduatc students on a range of topics and themes. The collection is enriched by the inclusion of a paper read to the 'Vikings' Symposium hosted by University of Limerick History Society in April 2000. While the essays vary in both style and content, all portray the author's perspective on a particular historical theme. This may sometimes lead the reader to question the arguments and reasoning of the author. This is to be encouraged. Indeed, in selecting these essays, we hope that readers will be infused with a sense of critical analysis which may prompt some to wrIte papers for subsequent volumes, in response to the views stated herein. The long-term success of History Studies rests less with the editors than with those who dare to submit the...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3678
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (16)
(2015)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (16)
(2015)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
The seven contributions to History Studies Volume 16 continue the tradition of showcasing the very best of undergraduate and postgraduate talent in Ireland, and specifically, at the University of Limerick. In contrast to previous years, the narrower focus of the present volume digs deep into the nation’s history, showing a range and diversity of interest of both archival research and analytical reflection that build on the impressive record of History Studies since its inception at the University of Limerick at the end of the 1990s. As a peer reviewed journal, History Studies is entirely produced by postgraduates with a rotating editorship, and this makes it unique within the island of Ireland. Therefore it brings me enormous pleasure again to introduce History Studies, especially in this centenary year of the 1916 Rising. The present volume is a response to the celebrations with its special focus on the 1916 Rising and its legacy. As such, it is an important contribution to the His...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8901
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (9)
(2008)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (9)
(2008)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
The editors of History Studies are pleased to present a body of work composed of unique and exciting articles that present a wide scope of historical research. The selected contributions are diverse in nature and deep in scope. and portray the exciting new research that is being undertaken by post-graduate scholars from a wide range of universities. This ninth volume of History Studies continues the tradition of providing a literary channel for outstanding post-graduate historical research. It also has a new visual dimension with the inclusion of seven photographs showing Ireland's heritage. These images work with the articles to press upon the uninformed the importance of history. For in order to understand the present. one must peer deeply into the past. Gavin Wilk JPO'Connor
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3685
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (8)
(2007)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (8)
(2007)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
With the publication of History Studies volume eight the editors are pleased to present an interesting and diverse array of articles. The nine contributions that have been selected for publication in this volume are the result uf a call-for papers that was circulated to over one hundred centres around the world in the spring of 2007. This led to an unprecedented response with high-quality articles received from researchers in several continents. The high number of submissions from within Ireland demonstrates the abundance of postgraduate history researchers working in the country's academic institutions at this time. This brought about the inevitable difficult decisions for the editors in having to reject many exceptional contributions wholly on the basis of a lack of space. Over the past eight years History Studies has played an important role in providing an outlet for the publication of post-graduate historical research. The response to this call-for-papers provides strong e...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3684
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (4)
(2003)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (4)
(2003)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
It is with great pleasure that the editors present volume four of History Studies. It is hoped that the reader finds this volume a worthy successor to the preceeding volumes, these provide the foundations upon which we have sought to build. This journal represents a vital and in many respects a unique link between the University of Limerick History Society, Department of History and the broader university communities. The key function of this publication is to act as a gateway, providing an opportunity to young scholars to publish portions of their work. It also contributes to what is an impressive profile of historical publishing within the University of Limerick student community. As editors we were constantly humbled by the breadth and depth of the subjects tackled by the authors. It was our intention to provide as free a canvass as possible, to allow the contributors to explore their topics as they wished. This approach was pursued with the intenlion of creating a collection of ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3680
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick Society Journal Vol (11)
(2010)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick Society Journal Vol (11)
(2010)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
I am pleased to present volume eleven of History Studies. This contains nine essays based on the work of postgraduate students in both Irish and British universities. The essays in this volume cover various aspects of Irish, British and American history. Ranging from a defence of Irish 'general history' to a re-evaluation of the 'war of the world's' broadcast in the United States in 1938. The essays presented are as varied as royal succession in medieval England to the role of the IRA in the anti-drugs campaign in I980s Dublin and the 1641 rebellion in Cavan to the conservative revival in England. The range of essays highlights the expanding nature of historical enquiries being pursued by research students in our universities. This in turn will ensure the survival of joumals like tbis one. Paul Hayes
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3687
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (12)
(2011)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (12)
(2011)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
I am pleased to present a diverse set of essays in volume twelve of History Studies. The high number of submissions shows the abundance of postgraduate history researchers working at this time. Many exceptional essays were rejected wholly on the basis of a lack of space. The essays in this journal are from contributors across Britain and Ireland, encompassing a wide range of topics. From 13th century warfare to political violence in Cork in the first decade of the 20th century, various political themes are also evident spanning a number of countries. The diversity of submissions shows the strength of postgraduate research withthin the universities on these islands. Paul Hayes
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3688
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (5)
(2004)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (5)
(2004)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
It is with great pleasure that the editors present volume five of History Studies, the journal of the History Society of the University of Limerick. It is our opinion that this volume marks a watershed in the life of this journal. The strength and quality of the articles is selfevident. In this volume we are delighted to publish work from contributors across a broad spectrum of academia; encompassing undergraduate, masters and doctoral levels. At the risk of striking an arrogant note, the articles contained within volume five have reached new heights in respect of diversity, content and writing style. The editing of this volume was both rewarding and entertaining. To our contributors we are most grateful for their insight and generosity. It is our hope that brave young scholars will continue to contribute to our journal. Without them we would not be writing this editorial. Bravo! Declan Jackson John Maguire ]ennifer Moore
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3681
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (6)
(2005)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (6)
(2005)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
History Studies, in its sixth edition, has continued to attract an eclectic selection of studies, reflective of the research being conducted in Irish institutions and the field of Irish history. The contributions to this publication represent post-doctoral and doctoral research both in its nascent and concluding stages. Volume six has, for the first time, incorporated reviews of recent additions to Irish historiography. The reviews were chosen to emphasise some of the emerging new themes within Irish historical scholarship. The range of Irish historiography has expanded greatly in the last decade and the present state of research is deemed to he healthy. However, the experience of post-graduate students in particular, suggests that the services available to researchers in this country have not evolved in tandem with this development. The repositories of historical sources in Ireland are under funded and are struggling to fulfil their function. Archival institutions are often underst...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3682
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (14)
(2013)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (14)
(2013)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
We are pleased to present volume fourteen of History Studies. This editions contains eight essay’s based on the work of both undergraduates and postgraduates students’ in both Irish and British universities. The essays include topical issues about the Home Rule crisis and the Labour Movement, the role of Irish nurses in the First World War and the protests by the poet Siegfried Sassoon against the brutality of the Great War. In addition, there is a variety of other subjects ranging from the Shepeardes Calanders in the reign of Elizabeth I to the anti-smoking campaigns of Nazi Germany in the twentieth century.These essays demonstrate that History Studies is continuing to provide a platform for cutting edge research by both undergraduate and postgraduate students’. The wide variety of essays presented also demonstrates that there is an appetite among history students’ for historical knowledge. It is that search for knowledge that will ensure that the journal will continue to thrive in...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8899
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (19)
(2018)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (19)
(2018)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
We Have excellent articles presented here in the most recent volume of History Studies. Together they show that by re-examining old questions with new evidence, and by applying innovative approaches to carefully selected topics, history may continue to enlighten and inform. The areas that are discussed in these essays include religious history, representations of gender and identity, high politics, cultural perceptions, social reform. What is common in all of them is a freshness of interpretation that allows the reader to think of apparently familiar subjects in new and interesting ways.Talitha Maria Schepers has considered Antonio de Salazar y Frías’s rational approach to the business of investigating allegations of diabolic heresy in seventeenth-century Navarre. Her essay conveys an idea of the beneficial role of the Inquisition in limiting the spread of witch persecution south of the Pyrenees. Gillian Sarah Macdonald, meanwhile, has provided a vigorously written examination...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8910
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (20)
(2019)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (20)
(2019)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
History Studies is a refereed publication of the University of Limerick and is published annually. The cover incorporates the concepts of past, present and future, which is depicted, firstly by the use if the Buddhist symbol Aum. The idea is secondly represented by the illustrative heads looking in different directions. They symbolise the search for history by past, present and future historians
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8911
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (3)
(2001)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (3)
(2001)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
The publication of History Studies volume 3 marks the beginning of a new period. The involvement of founder-editors David A. Fleming and Edward Horgan has come to an end. Both have done a magnificent job in establishing History Studies. On behalf of the History Societv of the University of Limerick we, the new editor, thank David and Edward for their work, They have made it easy for us to continue and expand History Studies. The variety and quality of topics tackled by the authors, shows that the study of history is alive and well in Ireland at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. The articles presented here deal with a variety of issues such as education, medical history, and the First World War. This gives hope for future volumes of History Studies in which we plan to broaden the range of topics even further. We hope that readers will gain as much pleasure from reading the articles as we did editing them, Andreas Hüther Sarah Power
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3679
Marked
Mark
Teaching the nation's past: Irish history in secondary schools, 1924-1969
(2019)
MAC GEARAILT, COLM
Teaching the nation's past: Irish history in secondary schools, 1924-1969
(2019)
MAC GEARAILT, COLM
Abstract:
This thesis considers the teaching of Irish history in Irish secondary schools post-Independence. It analyses the version(s) of the past set for study, taught in schools, and learned by students in the Irish Free State and beyond. It tracks history as a subject, and specifically Irish history within this, from 1924, when the Department of Education was first founded, until 1969. It contends that a narrative of Irish history was promoted in secondary schools which tended to focus on a traditional ?Great Man? approach to history with a strong emphasis on high politics, and on religion. This narrative was not as simplistic however as previously assumed. By taking the differing emphases in the major textbooks into account, and appreciating how the Certificate examinations were not solely focused on promoting a militant version of Irish Catholic history, it challenges the received understanding of Irish history as taught in secondary schools during the period under investigation. As part...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/86840
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (17)
(2016)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (17)
(2016)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
As on previous occasions, it gives me great pleasure to write the Foreword to this volume of History Studies, now in its seventeenth year. History Studies is a unique achievement of UL’s Student History Society; it also reflects the talent of the island of Ireland’s (and beyond) talent among its emerging scholars. Each volume goes through a rigorous peer review and the result is a showcase of the very best of history writing in our universities today. This year sees a return to diversity in the range of topics (last year was themed to coincide with the 1916 Rising). The eight contributions by undergraduates and graduates take us from eighteenth-century Ireland to late twentieth-century Peru, with stops in Belfast, the American Deep South, the former West Germany, and twentieth-century Ireland. There is something in the present volume for every interested reader. The volume opens with a wonderful essay by Lesley Donaldson from Queen’s University Belfast (and the only female among the...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8902
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (13)
(2012)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (13)
(2012)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
We are very pleased to present this year's selection of articles from both Ireland and abroad. These student and early-career contributions reflect the breadth of scholarly engagement with a diversity of historical issues. Articles range from domestic issues such as the vaccination controversy in the early-twentieth century to often giant steps into the 'next big thing' in terms of entertainment media as well as more light-hearted but equally enlightening issues as 'bleeding' statues in conflict-struck Tipperary and the tribulations of a charitable German. Works on the cold war-era; one specific to the sub-Saharan Somali nation and another more broadly but comprehensively on the containment policy as well as population issues, gender and denominationally-specific, from nineteenth-century Bulgaria and inter-war France complete this edition. As in past years, many fine essays could not be included because of lack of space in the printed edition. However, this ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3689
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (10)
(2009)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Journal Vol (10)
(2009)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
I am pleased to present a diverse series or essays from Ireland, the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada in volume ten of the History Studies. It has heen difficult to restrict the number or essays to nine as the essays omitted were or a very high standard. Although the essays are arranged in a loose chronological order: commencing with a discussion on the the gravestone of a lonely Roman soldier in Spain, continued through the Middle Ages' expansion or Christianity, passing through early modern European philosophy and nineteenth-century emigration and gender issues and finally ending in Ireland and Shanghai in the post-war period. This collection provides a glimpse into the bewildering range of themes possible under the ever expanding umbrella or history. It is important that postgraduage studies have a forum and I believe that volume ten will spur many more students into offering their work for the editorial gaze of volume eleven. Freyne Corbett
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/3686
Marked
Mark
Facts or Fiction? : the Church of Ireland's writting of Irish church history 1838-1870
(2014)
Blake Knox, Jamie
Facts or Fiction? : the Church of Ireland's writting of Irish church history 1838-1870
(2014)
Blake Knox, Jamie
Abstract:
THESIS 10856
This thesis explores a central, but curiously neglected dimension of the cultural and intellectual history of Ireland in the nineteenth century. It addresses the systematic attempt by a group of scholars and academics, largely based in Trinity College, Dublin, to re-write the history of the Irish Church. Their preoccupation with the historical origins of their Church was shared with English Episcopalians. In both cases, academics and theologians sought justification for the birth of their respective Reformed branches of Christianity.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/79489
Marked
Mark
The personal letter as a source for the history of women in Ireland, 1750 - 1830
(2017)
Maxwell, Jane
The personal letter as a source for the history of women in Ireland, 1750 - 1830
(2017)
Maxwell, Jane
Abstract:
THESIS 11419
The historiography of women in eighteenth-century Ireland has arrived at a key point. In fewer than fifty years it has come close to centre stage on a strengthening foundation of social history. Biography, with its restricted relevance, and surveys, with their necessary effacement of detail, have now begun to be joined by focussed work on some women in smaller groups, with a tight chronological or geographical setting permitting the gravitational pull of the groups to be assessed. Scholarship in England that revealed nuance and contingency to be the key descriptors of women?s has been echoed in Ireland. The question is, where will the work go from here? Decades ago, early historians of Irish women queried the failure to follow where most of the surviving records led - to the history of the domestic life of wealthy women. Work has begun in this area, and there is more to do, but the record is so fragmentary that there may be a limit to how much more richness remains ...
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/83144
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How reliable are the annals as a source for the history of the Uí Néill?
(1996)
Swift, Catherine
How reliable are the annals as a source for the history of the Uí Néill?
(1996)
Swift, Catherine
Abstract:
How reliable are the annals as a source for the history of the Uí Néill?
http://hdl.handle.net/10395/2749
Marked
Mark
For class, nation, race or god? : a transatlantic history of the Irish working class movement, 1889 - 1917
(2015)
Hunnewell, Leah
For class, nation, race or god? : a transatlantic history of the Irish working class movement, 1889 - 1917
(2015)
Hunnewell, Leah
Abstract:
THESIS 11103
This thesis is a cultural study of the Irish working-class movement from 1889 to 1917. The aim of this thesis is to explore how transatlantic networks shaped the way the Irish working-class movement crafted its vision of Irish working-class identity. The research takes a transatlantic approach as a means of challenging the exclusivity of the colonial framework that dominates Irish working-class history. These colonial influences are not rejected outright, as significant elements of British imperial history and culture play a crucial role in shaping this study; rather, the purpose is to question other potential influences shaping an Irish imperial outlook, such as those developing from the Atlantic World.
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/90233
Marked
Mark
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (15)
(2014)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (15)
(2014)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
It brings enormous pleasure to see the launch of Volume 15 of History Studies. The eight contributions to it are testament to the healthy state of history as currently practised by today’s undergraduate and post graduate scholars. Indeed, the chronological range and diversity of interest and the quality of both the archival research and analytical reflection that we find here, build on the impressive record of Historical Studies since its inception at the University of Limerick at the end of the 1990s. As a peer reviewed journal, Historical Studies is entirely produced by postgraduates with a rotating editorship, and this makes it unique within the island of Ireland. The essays reflect the direction in research that is currently being undertaken by the rising generation of scholars. Collectively, the essays thus offer an insight into the changing historiographical landscape in each field or period of study, as we can read in the contributions by Nina Vodstrup Andersen, who examines ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8900
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History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (18)
(2017)
University of Limerick History Society
History Studies: University of Limerick History Society Vol (18)
(2017)
University of Limerick History Society
Abstract:
This latest volume of the History Studies journal offers many fresh insights that help us to understand the past better. The essays cover a refreshingly broad spectrum. As well as twentieth-century Irish history, there is an emphasis on US responses to its domestic and international problems, and on European experiences of the Ottoman Empire. Attention is also given to approaches to scriptural translation in the Reformation period, and to the mixed loyalties of soldiers in the Bourbon armies of the early eighteenth century. William O’Neill, and Daniel Haverty have presented novel interpretations of well-studied subjects. O’Neill shows how received understanding of the Carter administration’s supposed lack of direction in foreign policy is belied by its success in luring the USSR into a debilitating military commitment in Afghanistan. Haverty has provided a reassessment of the rise of the IRSP/INLA following Bloody Sunday, one in which the nationalist desire for independence ...
http://hdl.handle.net/10344/8904
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