Showing 1 - 5 results of 5 for search '"Irish Independent"', query time: 0.07s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Independent Ireland in comparative perspective by O'Rourke, K

    Published 2017
    “…Irish independence would not have worked as well for us as it did without the EU; and the EU would not have worked as well for us as it did without political independence.…”
    Working paper
  2. 2

    Independent Ireland in comparative perspective by O'Rourke, K

    Published 2017
    “…Irish independence would not have worked as well for us as it did without the EU; and the EU would not have worked as well for us as it did without political independence.…”
    Journal article
  3. 3

    Military History from the Street: Richard S. Grayson, Dublin’s Great Wars: the First World War, the Easter Rising and the Irish Revolution,Cambridge University Press, 2018 by Morrison, E

    Published 2020
    “…In Ireland and the Great War, the late Keith Jeffery argued that the 1914–18 conflict was an essential context for the Irish independence struggle, and that the Easter Rising (1916), the War of Independence (1919–21) and Civil War (1922–3) were integral parts of the same story.1 This is also the starting point of Dublin’s Great Wars, a ‘new military history’ and prosopography of British soldiers and Irish republicans who resided in Ireland’s capital city during these years. …”
    Journal article
  4. 4

    Representing Éire by Pereira, L

    Published 2007
    “…Part of the conclusion is given over to tracing the legend's fate in adaptations since the advent of Irish independence. The chronological framework adopted allows a new perspective to emerge which reveals that the Deirdre legend provided a means of reflecting on the various cultural and political conflicts in which Irish identity has been implicated. …”
    Thesis
  5. 5

    The minority voice by Tobin, R, Tobin, Robert

    Published 2004
    “…Very little indeed has been written about the generation of Southern Protestant intellectuals following them, those writers, journalists, academics and churchmen who were born around 1900 and who came of age in the decade following Irish Independence. Though few in number, these people represent an important facet of the young nation's cultural history and serve to refute the blanket assumption that the minority community had neither the will nor the ability to make a contribution to the new dispensation. …”
    Thesis