Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T05:15:02.464Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2019

Conor Morrissey
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Andrews, C. S., Dublin made me: an autobiography (Dublin, 1979).Google Scholar
Brennan-Whitmore, W. J., With the Irish in Frongoch (Dublin, 1917).Google Scholar
Carberry, Juanita, ‘Child of Happy Valley’, Ardfield/Rathbarry Journal, No. 3 (2000–2001), 18–20.Google Scholar
Colles, Ramsay, In castle and court house: being reminiscences of thirty years in Ireland (London, 1911).Google Scholar
Czira, Sidney Gifford, The years flew by (Hayes, John, ed.) (Galway, 2000 [1974]).Google Scholar
De Blaghd, Earnán [Ernest Blythe], Trasna na Bóinne (Dublin, 1957).Google Scholar
De Montmorency, Hervey, Sword and stirrup: memories of an adventurous life (London, 1936).Google Scholar
Figgis, Darrell, Recollections of the Irish war (New York, 1927).Google Scholar
FitzGerald, Desmond, Desmond’s rising: memoirs, 1913 to Easter 1916 (Dublin, 2006 [1968]).Google Scholar
FitzGerald, Garret, All in a life: an autobiography (Dublin, 1991).Google Scholar
Gonne MacBride, Maud, A servant of the Queen: reminiscences (London, 1938).Google Scholar
Gwynn, Stephen, Experiences of a literary man (London, 1926).Google Scholar
Hobson, Bulmer, Ireland yesterday and tomorrow (Tralee, 1968).Google Scholar
Johnstone, Thomas M., The vintage of memory (Belfast, 1943).Google Scholar
Krause, David (ed.), The letters of Sean O’Casey, Vol. II: 1942–54 (New York, 1980).Google Scholar
Leslie, Shane, The film of memory (London, 1938).Google Scholar
MacBride White, Anna, and Norman, Jeffares A. (eds.), The Gonne–Yeats letters, 1893–1938: always your friend (London, 1992).Google Scholar
Midleton, the earl of, Records and reactions: 1856–1939 (London, 1939).Google Scholar
O’Casey, Sean, Drums under the windows, in Autobiographies, Vol. I (London, 1992 [originally published as a single volume in 1945]).Google Scholar
O’Connor, Frank, An only child (London, 1972 [1961]).Google Scholar
O’Donnell, William H., and Archibald, Douglas N. (eds.), The collected works of W. B. Yeats, Vol. III: Autobiographies (New York, 1999).Google Scholar
O’Leary, John, Recollections of Fenians and Fenianism, Vol. II (London, 1896).Google Scholar
O’Malley, Cormac K. H., and Dolan, Anne (eds.), No surrender here!’: the Civil War papers of Ernie O’Malley, 1922–1924 (Dublin, 2007).Google Scholar
O’Malley, Ernie, On another man’s wound (London, 1936).Google Scholar
Pearce, Donald R. (ed.), The senate speeches of W. B. Yeats (London, 1960).Google Scholar
Pyle, Hilary (ed.), Cesca’s diary, 1913–1916: where art and nationalism meet (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Sandford, Jeremy (ed.), Mary Carbery’s West Cork Journal, 1898–1901 (Dublin, 1998).Google Scholar
Smithson, Annie M. P., Myself – and others: an autobiography (Dublin, 1944).Google Scholar
Walsh, Oonagh (ed.), An Englishwoman in Belfast: Rosamond Stephen’s record of the Great War (Cork, 2000).Google Scholar
Wells, Warre B., Irish indiscretions (London, 1923).Google Scholar
White, Jack, Misfit: a revolutionary life (Dublin, 2005 [1930]).Google Scholar
Young, Ella, Flowering dusk: things remembered accurately and inaccurately (New York, 1945).Google Scholar
[Various authors], Poems and ballads of Young Ireland (Dublin, 1888).Google Scholar
Albright, Daniel (ed.), W. B. Yeats: the poems (London, 1992).Google Scholar
Birmingham, George A., The seething pot (London, 1905).Google Scholar
Brodrick, Albinia, Verses of adversity (London, 1904).Google Scholar
Clark, David R., and Clark, Rosalind E. (eds.), The collected works of W. B. Yeats, Vol. II: the plays (New York, 2001).Google Scholar
Joyce, James, Ulysses, Bodley Head ed. (1986 [1922]).Google Scholar
Mangan, Henry (ed.), Poems by Alice Milligan (Dublin, 1954).Google Scholar
Milligan, Alice, The harper of the only God: a selection of poetry by Alice Milligan (Johnston, Sheila Turner, ed.) (Omagh, 1993).Google Scholar
Zach, Wolfgang (ed.), Selected plays by Rutherford Mayne (Washington, DC, 2006).Google Scholar
[Anonymous] The book of the fete: Queen’s College, Belfast: May 29, 30, 31st and June 1st 1907 (Belfast, 1907).Google Scholar
[Anonymous] The voice of the Protestant Church in Ireland (n.p., n.d. [c. 1922]).Google Scholar
[Anonymous] ‘As others see us: Protestant recruit’s experience in the army’, An t-Óglach, 24 March 1923, 7.Google Scholar
[Various authors], A Protestant protest: Ballymoney, Oct. 24th 1913 (Ballymoney, 1913).Google Scholar
Béaslaí, Piaras, ‘Moods and memories’, Irish Independent, 11 December 1963.Google Scholar
Bigger, Francis Joseph, William Orr (Dublin, 1906).Google Scholar
Childers, Erskine, The framework of home rule (London, 1911).Google Scholar
Clery, Arthur E., ‘The Gaelic League, 1893–1919’, Studies, Vol. 8, No. 31 (September 1919), 398408.Google Scholar
Connolly, James, Labour in Irish History (Dublin, 1910).Google Scholar
Cotton, A. W., ‘Seán Lester’, Focus, July 1959, 13–14.Google Scholar
Crawford, Lindsay, Irish grievances and their remedy (Dublin, 1905).Google Scholar
Crawford, Lindsay, The Problem of Ulster (New York, 1920[?]).Google Scholar
Crone, J. S., and Bigger, F. C. (eds.), In remembrance: articles and sketches: biographical, historical, topographical by Francis Joseph Bigger M.A., M.R.I.A., F.R.S.A.I. (Dublin, 1927).Google Scholar
De Blacam, Aodh, What Sinn Féin stands for (Dublin, 1921).Google Scholar
De Burca, Padraig, and Boyle, John F., Free State or republic? (Dublin, 2003 [1922]).Google Scholar
Dinneen, Patrick, ‘The Gaelic League and non-sectarianism’, Irish Rosary, Vol. 11, No. 1 (January 1907), 513.Google Scholar
Eden, Maud, ‘Protestants, organise’, New Ireland, 17 March 1917.Google Scholar
St. Ervine, John G., Sir Edward Carson and the Ulster movement (Dublin, 1915).Google Scholar
Falls, Cyril, The history of the 36th (Ulster) Division (Belfast, 1922).Google Scholar
Forde, Patrick, The Irish language movement: its philosophy, Gaelic League pamphlet No. 21 (London, n.d. [1901]), 2728.Google Scholar
Griffith, Arthur, The resurrection of Hungary: a parallel for Ireland (Dublin, 2003 [1904]).Google Scholar
Hannay, James Owen, Is the Gaelic League political?: lecture delivered under the auspices of the Branch of the Five Provinces on January 23rd, 1906 (n.p., n.d.).Google Scholar
Johnston, Joseph, Civil war in Ulster: its objects and probable results (Dublin, 1913).Google Scholar
Knott, George H. (ed.), Trial of Sir Roger Casement (Philadelphia, 1917).Google Scholar
MacCrainn, Batha [Roger Casement], ‘Ireland and the German menace’, The Irish Review, Vol. 2, No. 19 (September 1912), 343–345.Google Scholar
Malone, Andrew E., ‘Darrell Figgis’, The Dublin Magazine, April–June 1926, 15–26.Google Scholar
McNeill, Ronald, Ulster’s stand for the union (London, 1922).Google Scholar
Moran, D. P., The philosophy of Irish Ireland (Dublin, 1905).Google Scholar
Nankivell, Joyce M., and Loch, Sydney, Ireland in travail (London, 1922).Google Scholar
Nicholls, Harry, ‘Memories of the Contemporary Club’, parts I and II, Irish Times, 20, 21 December 1965.Google Scholar
O’Casey, Sean, The story of the Irish Citizen Army (Dublin, 1919).Google Scholar
O’Donnell, Frank Hugh, The ruin of education in Ireland and the Irish Fanar (London, 1902).Google Scholar
O’Hegarty, P. S., The victory of Sinn Féin (Dublin, 1998 [1924]).Google Scholar
O’Leary, John, Young Ireland: the old and the new (Dublin, 1885).Google Scholar
Rolleston, T. W. (ed.), Prose writings of Thomas Davis (London, 1890).Google Scholar
Rolleston, T. W., Ireland, the Empire, and the War (Dublin, 1900).Google Scholar
Russell, George, Thoughts for a convention (Dublin, 1917).Google Scholar
Russell, George, Conscription for Ireland: a warning to England (Dublin, 1918).Google Scholar
Sgéal Ruaidhrí Uí Mhórdha, Autobiography of the Ruairi O More Branch of the Gaelic League, Portarlington (Dublin, 1906).Google Scholar
Stephens, James, Insurrection in Dublin (Dublin, 1916).Google Scholar
Stopford Green, Alice, The government of Ireland (London, 1921).Google Scholar
Stopford Green, Alice, The history of the Irish state to 1014 (London, 1925).Google Scholar
Tobin, T. J., ‘President de Valera at Notre Dame’, Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 53, No. 4 (1919), 58.Google Scholar
Trench, Wilbraham Fitzjohn, The way to fellowship in Irish life (London, 1919).Google Scholar
Ua Fhloinn, Riobard [Robert Lynd], The Orangemen and the nation (Belfast, 1907).Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

Andrews, C. S., Dublin made me: an autobiography (Dublin, 1979).Google Scholar
Brennan-Whitmore, W. J., With the Irish in Frongoch (Dublin, 1917).Google Scholar
Carberry, Juanita, ‘Child of Happy Valley’, Ardfield/Rathbarry Journal, No. 3 (2000–2001), 18–20.Google Scholar
Colles, Ramsay, In castle and court house: being reminiscences of thirty years in Ireland (London, 1911).Google Scholar
Czira, Sidney Gifford, The years flew by (Hayes, John, ed.) (Galway, 2000 [1974]).Google Scholar
De Blaghd, Earnán [Ernest Blythe], Trasna na Bóinne (Dublin, 1957).Google Scholar
De Montmorency, Hervey, Sword and stirrup: memories of an adventurous life (London, 1936).Google Scholar
Figgis, Darrell, Recollections of the Irish war (New York, 1927).Google Scholar
FitzGerald, Desmond, Desmond’s rising: memoirs, 1913 to Easter 1916 (Dublin, 2006 [1968]).Google Scholar
FitzGerald, Garret, All in a life: an autobiography (Dublin, 1991).Google Scholar
Gonne MacBride, Maud, A servant of the Queen: reminiscences (London, 1938).Google Scholar
Gwynn, Stephen, Experiences of a literary man (London, 1926).Google Scholar
Hobson, Bulmer, Ireland yesterday and tomorrow (Tralee, 1968).Google Scholar
Johnstone, Thomas M., The vintage of memory (Belfast, 1943).Google Scholar
Krause, David (ed.), The letters of Sean O’Casey, Vol. II: 1942–54 (New York, 1980).Google Scholar
Leslie, Shane, The film of memory (London, 1938).Google Scholar
MacBride White, Anna, and Norman, Jeffares A. (eds.), The Gonne–Yeats letters, 1893–1938: always your friend (London, 1992).Google Scholar
Midleton, the earl of, Records and reactions: 1856–1939 (London, 1939).Google Scholar
O’Casey, Sean, Drums under the windows, in Autobiographies, Vol. I (London, 1992 [originally published as a single volume in 1945]).Google Scholar
O’Connor, Frank, An only child (London, 1972 [1961]).Google Scholar
O’Donnell, William H., and Archibald, Douglas N. (eds.), The collected works of W. B. Yeats, Vol. III: Autobiographies (New York, 1999).Google Scholar
O’Leary, John, Recollections of Fenians and Fenianism, Vol. II (London, 1896).Google Scholar
O’Malley, Cormac K. H., and Dolan, Anne (eds.), No surrender here!’: the Civil War papers of Ernie O’Malley, 1922–1924 (Dublin, 2007).Google Scholar
O’Malley, Ernie, On another man’s wound (London, 1936).Google Scholar
Pearce, Donald R. (ed.), The senate speeches of W. B. Yeats (London, 1960).Google Scholar
Pyle, Hilary (ed.), Cesca’s diary, 1913–1916: where art and nationalism meet (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Sandford, Jeremy (ed.), Mary Carbery’s West Cork Journal, 1898–1901 (Dublin, 1998).Google Scholar
Smithson, Annie M. P., Myself – and others: an autobiography (Dublin, 1944).Google Scholar
Walsh, Oonagh (ed.), An Englishwoman in Belfast: Rosamond Stephen’s record of the Great War (Cork, 2000).Google Scholar
Wells, Warre B., Irish indiscretions (London, 1923).Google Scholar
White, Jack, Misfit: a revolutionary life (Dublin, 2005 [1930]).Google Scholar
Young, Ella, Flowering dusk: things remembered accurately and inaccurately (New York, 1945).Google Scholar
[Various authors], Poems and ballads of Young Ireland (Dublin, 1888).Google Scholar
Albright, Daniel (ed.), W. B. Yeats: the poems (London, 1992).Google Scholar
Birmingham, George A., The seething pot (London, 1905).Google Scholar
Brodrick, Albinia, Verses of adversity (London, 1904).Google Scholar
Clark, David R., and Clark, Rosalind E. (eds.), The collected works of W. B. Yeats, Vol. II: the plays (New York, 2001).Google Scholar
Joyce, James, Ulysses, Bodley Head ed. (1986 [1922]).Google Scholar
Mangan, Henry (ed.), Poems by Alice Milligan (Dublin, 1954).Google Scholar
Milligan, Alice, The harper of the only God: a selection of poetry by Alice Milligan (Johnston, Sheila Turner, ed.) (Omagh, 1993).Google Scholar
Zach, Wolfgang (ed.), Selected plays by Rutherford Mayne (Washington, DC, 2006).Google Scholar
[Anonymous] The book of the fete: Queen’s College, Belfast: May 29, 30, 31st and June 1st 1907 (Belfast, 1907).Google Scholar
[Anonymous] The voice of the Protestant Church in Ireland (n.p., n.d. [c. 1922]).Google Scholar
[Anonymous] ‘As others see us: Protestant recruit’s experience in the army’, An t-Óglach, 24 March 1923, 7.Google Scholar
[Various authors], A Protestant protest: Ballymoney, Oct. 24th 1913 (Ballymoney, 1913).Google Scholar
Béaslaí, Piaras, ‘Moods and memories’, Irish Independent, 11 December 1963.Google Scholar
Bigger, Francis Joseph, William Orr (Dublin, 1906).Google Scholar
Childers, Erskine, The framework of home rule (London, 1911).Google Scholar
Clery, Arthur E., ‘The Gaelic League, 1893–1919’, Studies, Vol. 8, No. 31 (September 1919), 398408.Google Scholar
Connolly, James, Labour in Irish History (Dublin, 1910).Google Scholar
Cotton, A. W., ‘Seán Lester’, Focus, July 1959, 13–14.Google Scholar
Crawford, Lindsay, Irish grievances and their remedy (Dublin, 1905).Google Scholar
Crawford, Lindsay, The Problem of Ulster (New York, 1920[?]).Google Scholar
Crone, J. S., and Bigger, F. C. (eds.), In remembrance: articles and sketches: biographical, historical, topographical by Francis Joseph Bigger M.A., M.R.I.A., F.R.S.A.I. (Dublin, 1927).Google Scholar
De Blacam, Aodh, What Sinn Féin stands for (Dublin, 1921).Google Scholar
De Burca, Padraig, and Boyle, John F., Free State or republic? (Dublin, 2003 [1922]).Google Scholar
Dinneen, Patrick, ‘The Gaelic League and non-sectarianism’, Irish Rosary, Vol. 11, No. 1 (January 1907), 513.Google Scholar
Eden, Maud, ‘Protestants, organise’, New Ireland, 17 March 1917.Google Scholar
St. Ervine, John G., Sir Edward Carson and the Ulster movement (Dublin, 1915).Google Scholar
Falls, Cyril, The history of the 36th (Ulster) Division (Belfast, 1922).Google Scholar
Forde, Patrick, The Irish language movement: its philosophy, Gaelic League pamphlet No. 21 (London, n.d. [1901]), 2728.Google Scholar
Griffith, Arthur, The resurrection of Hungary: a parallel for Ireland (Dublin, 2003 [1904]).Google Scholar
Hannay, James Owen, Is the Gaelic League political?: lecture delivered under the auspices of the Branch of the Five Provinces on January 23rd, 1906 (n.p., n.d.).Google Scholar
Johnston, Joseph, Civil war in Ulster: its objects and probable results (Dublin, 1913).Google Scholar
Knott, George H. (ed.), Trial of Sir Roger Casement (Philadelphia, 1917).Google Scholar
MacCrainn, Batha [Roger Casement], ‘Ireland and the German menace’, The Irish Review, Vol. 2, No. 19 (September 1912), 343–345.Google Scholar
Malone, Andrew E., ‘Darrell Figgis’, The Dublin Magazine, April–June 1926, 15–26.Google Scholar
McNeill, Ronald, Ulster’s stand for the union (London, 1922).Google Scholar
Moran, D. P., The philosophy of Irish Ireland (Dublin, 1905).Google Scholar
Nankivell, Joyce M., and Loch, Sydney, Ireland in travail (London, 1922).Google Scholar
Nicholls, Harry, ‘Memories of the Contemporary Club’, parts I and II, Irish Times, 20, 21 December 1965.Google Scholar
O’Casey, Sean, The story of the Irish Citizen Army (Dublin, 1919).Google Scholar
O’Donnell, Frank Hugh, The ruin of education in Ireland and the Irish Fanar (London, 1902).Google Scholar
O’Hegarty, P. S., The victory of Sinn Féin (Dublin, 1998 [1924]).Google Scholar
O’Leary, John, Young Ireland: the old and the new (Dublin, 1885).Google Scholar
Rolleston, T. W. (ed.), Prose writings of Thomas Davis (London, 1890).Google Scholar
Rolleston, T. W., Ireland, the Empire, and the War (Dublin, 1900).Google Scholar
Russell, George, Thoughts for a convention (Dublin, 1917).Google Scholar
Russell, George, Conscription for Ireland: a warning to England (Dublin, 1918).Google Scholar
Sgéal Ruaidhrí Uí Mhórdha, Autobiography of the Ruairi O More Branch of the Gaelic League, Portarlington (Dublin, 1906).Google Scholar
Stephens, James, Insurrection in Dublin (Dublin, 1916).Google Scholar
Stopford Green, Alice, The government of Ireland (London, 1921).Google Scholar
Stopford Green, Alice, The history of the Irish state to 1014 (London, 1925).Google Scholar
Tobin, T. J., ‘President de Valera at Notre Dame’, Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 53, No. 4 (1919), 58.Google Scholar
Trench, Wilbraham Fitzjohn, The way to fellowship in Irish life (London, 1919).Google Scholar
Ua Fhloinn, Riobard [Robert Lynd], The Orangemen and the nation (Belfast, 1907).Google Scholar
McCann, Oliver, ‘The Protestant home rule movement, 1886–1895’, MA thesis, University College Dublin, 1972.Google Scholar
McConnel, James Richard Redmond, ‘The view from the backbench: Irish nationalist MPs and their work, 1910–1914’, PhD thesis, University of Durham, 2002.Google Scholar
McHenry, Margaret, ‘The Ulster theatre in Ireland’, PhD thesis, University of Pennsylvania, 1931.Google Scholar
Bateman, John, Great landowners of Great Britain and Ireland (London, 1876).Google Scholar
Burke, Bernard (ed.), A genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry of Ireland (London, 1904).Google Scholar
Burke, Bernard, Burke’s genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry of Ireland, 4th ed. (Pine, L. G., ed.) (London, 1958).Google Scholar
Burke’s Peerage and Baronetage, 105th ed. (London, 1970).Google Scholar
Castree, Noel, Kitchin, Rob, and Rogers, Alisdair, A dictionary of human geography (Oxford, 2013).Google Scholar
A catalogue of graduates of the University of Dublin, Vol. II (Dublin, 1896).Google Scholar
A catalogue of graduates of the University of Dublin, Vol. IV (Dublin, 1917).Google Scholar
A catalogue of graduates of the University of Dublin, Vol. V (Dublin, 1931).Google Scholar
Curtis, Edmund and McDowell, R. B. (eds.), Irish historical documents, 1172–1922 (New York, 1968).Google Scholar
De Burgh, U. H. Hussey, The Landowners of Ireland (Dublin, 1878).Google Scholar
Matthew, Colin, Harrison, Brian, and Goldman, Lawrence (eds.), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, 2004).Google Scholar
McGuire, James and Quinn, James (eds.), Dictionary of Irish biography (Cambridge, 2009).Google Scholar
Snoddy, Theo, Dictionary of Irish artists: 20th century (Dublin, 2002).Google Scholar
Vaughan, W. E., and Fitzpatrick, A. J., Irish historical statistics: population, 1821–1971 (Dublin, 1978).Google Scholar
Walford’s County Families of the United Kingdom, or Royal Manual of the Titled and Untitled Aristocracy of England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland (London, 1918).Google Scholar
Walker, Brian M. (ed.), Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland, 1801–1922 (Dublin, 1978).Google Scholar
Who Was Who, Vol. I: 1897–1915 (London, 1988).Google Scholar
Who Was Who, Vol. II: 1916–1928 (London, 1962).Google Scholar
Who Was Who, Vol. III: 1929–1940 (London, 1967).Google Scholar
[Various authors], Kerry’s fighting story, 1916–21 (Tralee, n.d. [1947]).Google Scholar
Akenson, Donald Harman, Small differences: Irish Catholics and Irish Protestants 1815–1922: an international perspective (Kingston, 1988).Google Scholar
Allen, Nicholas, George Russell (Æ) and the new Ireland, 1905–30 (Dublin, 2003).Google Scholar
Anderson, Benedict, Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism (London, 1983).Google Scholar
Arrington, Lauren, Revolutionary lives: Constance and Casimir Markievicz (Princeton, 2016).Google Scholar
Armour, W. S., Armour of Ballymoney (London, 1934).Google Scholar
Bartlett, Thomas, The fall and rise of the Irish nation: the Catholic question, 1690–1830 (Dublin, 1992).Google Scholar
Beckett, J. C., The Anglo-Irish tradition (London, 1976).Google Scholar
Bell, Sam Hanna, Theatre in Ulster (Totowa, 1972).Google Scholar
Bence-Jones, Mark, Twilight of the ascendancy (London, 1987).Google Scholar
Beneš, Jakub S., Workers and nationalism: Czech and German social democracy in Habsburg Austria, 1890–1918 (Oxford, 2016).Google Scholar
Berresford Ellis, Peter, The Celtic dawn: a history of Pan Celticism (London, 1993).Google Scholar
Bew, Paul, C. S. Parnell (Dublin, 1980).Google Scholar
Bew, Paul, Enigma: a new life of Charles Stewart Parnell (Dublin, 2011).Google Scholar
Biagini, Eugenio, and Mulhall, Daniel (eds.), The shaping of modern Ireland: a centenary assessment (Sallins, 2016).Google Scholar
Bjork, James E., Neither German nor Pole: Catholicism and national indifference in a Central European borderland (Ann Arbor, MI, 2008).Google Scholar
Blaney, Roger, Presbyterians and the Irish language (Belfast, 1996).Google Scholar
Bourke, Marcus, John O’Leary: a study in Irish separatism (Tralee, 1967).Google Scholar
Bowman, John, De Valera and the Ulster question, 1917–1973 (Oxford, 1982).Google Scholar
Bowman, Timothy, Carson’s Army: the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1910–22 (Manchester, 2007).Google Scholar
Boyce, D. George, Nationalism in Ireland (London, 1995).Google Scholar
Boyd, Andrew, Jack White (1879–1946): first commander Irish Citizen Army (Belfast, 2001).Google Scholar
Boyle, Andrew, The riddle of Erskine Childers (London, 1977).Google Scholar
Bracken, David (ed.), The end of all things earthly: faith profiles of the 1916 leaders (Dublin, 2016).Google Scholar
Brooke, Peter, Ulster Presbyterianism: the historical perspective 1610–1970 (Dublin, 1987).Google Scholar
Brown, Terence, Ireland: a social and cultural history, 1922–79 (London, 1981).Google Scholar
Brown, Terence, The life of W. B. Yeats: a critical biography (Dublin, 1999).Google Scholar
Bryant, Chad, Prague in black: Nazi rule and Czech nationalism (Cambridge, MA, 2007).Google Scholar
Butler, Hubert, The sub-prefect should have held his tongue and other essays (Foster, R. F., ed.) (London, 1990).Google Scholar
Campbell, Fergus, The Irish establishment: 1879–1914 (Oxford, 2009).Google Scholar
Campbell, Flann, The dissenting voice: Protestant democracy in Ulster from plantation to partition (Dublin, 1991).Google Scholar
Canny, Nicholas, Making Ireland British, 1580–1650 (Oxford, 2001).Google Scholar
Carroll, F. M., American opinion and the Irish question, 1910–23: a study in opinion and policy (Dublin, 1978).Google Scholar
Clare, Anne, Unlikely rebels: the Gifford girls and the fight for Irish freedom (Cork, 2011).Google Scholar
Clark, Gemma, Everyday violence in the Irish Civil War (Cambridge, 2014).Google Scholar
Coffey, Diarmid, Douglas Hyde: president of Ireland (Dublin, 1938).Google Scholar
Comerford, R. V., Ireland (London, 2003).Google Scholar
Connolly, S. J., Religion, law and power: the making of Protestant Ireland, 1660–1760 (Oxford, 1992).Google Scholar
Coolahan, John, Irish education: its history and structure (Dublin, 1981).Google Scholar
Cullen Owens, Rosemary, Louie Bennett (Cork, 2001).Google Scholar
Daly, D. P., The young Douglas Hyde: the dawn of the Irish revolution and renaissance (Dublin, 1974).Google Scholar
Davis, Richard, Arthur Griffith and non-violent Sinn Fein (Dublin, 1974).Google Scholar
Dudgeon, Jeffrey, Roger Casement: the Black Diaries: with a study of his background, sexuality and Irish political life (Belfast, 2002).Google Scholar
Dunleavy, Janet Egleson, and Dunleavy, Gareth W., Douglas Hyde: a maker of modern Ireland (Berkeley, 1991).Google Scholar
Dwan, David, The great community: culture and nationalism in Ireland (Dublin, 2008).Google Scholar
Elliott, Marianne, Wolfe Tone: prophet of Irish independence (New Haven, 1989).Google Scholar
Elliott, Marianne, When God took sides: religion and identity in Ireland – unfinished identity (Oxford, 2009).Google Scholar
Ellmann, Richard, James Joyce: new and revised edition (Oxford, 1982 [1959]).Google Scholar
Emerson, Caryl, The Cambridge introduction to Russian literature (Cambridge, 2008).Google Scholar
English, Richard, Radicals and the republic: socialist republicanism in the Irish Free State, 1925–1937 (Oxford, 1994).Google Scholar
English, Richard, Irish freedom: the history of nationalism in Ireland (London, 2006).Google Scholar
Faivre, Antoine, Theosophy, imagination, tradition: studies in western esotericism (Rhone, Christine, trans.) (New York, 2000).Google Scholar
Farrell, Michael, Northern Ireland: the Orange state (London, 1976).Google Scholar
Fermanagh 1916 Centenary Association, Fearless but few: Fermanagh and the Easter Rising (Castleblayney, 2015).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, Politics and Irish life, 1913–1921: provincial experience of war and revolution, rev. ed. (Cork, 1998 [1977]).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, The two Irelands, 1912–1939 (Oxford, 1998).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, Harry Boland’s Irish revolution (Cork, 2003).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, Descendancy: Irish Protestant histories since 1795 (Cambridge, 2014).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, Ernest Blythe in Ulster: the making of a double agent? (Cork, 2018).Google Scholar
Flanagan, Francis, Remembering the revolution: dissent, culture and nationalism in the Irish Free State (Oxford, 2015).Google Scholar
Forester, Margery, Michael Collins: the lost leader (Dublin, 1971).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Modern Ireland, 1600–1972 (London, 1988).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Paddy and Mr Punch: connections in Irish history and English history (London, 1993).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., W. B. Yeats: a life, Vol. I: the apprentice mage (Oxford, 1997).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., W. B. Yeats: a life, Vol. II: the arch-poet, 1915–1939 (Oxford, 2003).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Words alone: Yeats and his inheritances (Oxford, 2011).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Vivid faces: the revolutionary generation in Ireland, 1890–1923 (London, 2014).Google Scholar
Fox, R. M., Rebel Irishwomen (Cork, 1935).Google Scholar
Fox, R. M., The history of the Irish Citizen Army (Dublin, 1943).Google Scholar
Frazier, Adrian, Hollywood Irish: John Ford, Abbey actors and the Irish revival in Hollywood (Dublin, 2010).Google Scholar
Frazier, Adrian, The adulterous muse: Maud Gonne, Lucien Millevoye and W. B. Yeats (Dublin, 2016).Google Scholar
Gageby, Douglas, The last secretary general: Sean Lester and the League of Nations (Dublin, 1999).Google Scholar
Gailey, Andrew, Ireland and the death of kindness: the experience of constructive unionism, 1890–1905 (Cork, 1987).Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom, The evolution of Irish nationalist politics (Dublin, 1981).Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom, Nationalist revolutionaries in Ireland, 1858–1928 (Oxford, 1987).Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom, 1922: The birth of Irish democracy (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Gaughan, J. Anthony, Thomas Johnson, 1872–1963: first leader of the Labour Party in Dáil Éireann (Dublin, 1980).Google Scholar
Gellner, Ernest, Thought and change (London, 1964).Google Scholar
Gellner, Ernest, Nations and nationalism (Oxford, 1983).Google Scholar
Gray, John, City in revolt: James Larkin and the Belfast dock strike of 1907 (Belfast, 1985).Google Scholar
Gray, Randal, Kaiserschlacht: the final German offensive of World War One (Oxford, 1991).Google Scholar
Grosby, Steven, Nationalism: a very short introduction (New York, 2005).Google Scholar
Groves, Patricia, Petticoat rebellion: the Anna Parnell story (Cork, 2009).Google Scholar
Harrington, Niall C., Kerry landing: August 1922, An episode of the Civil War (Dublin, 1992).Google Scholar
Hart, Peter, The IRA and its enemies: violence and community in Cork, 1916–1923 (Oxford, 1998).Google Scholar
Hart, Peter, The IRA at war, 1916–1923 (Oxford, 2003).Google Scholar
Hastings, Adrian, The construction of nationhood: ethnicity, religion and nationalism (Cambridge, 1997).Google Scholar
Haverty, Anne, Constance Markievicz: an independent life (London, 1988).Google Scholar
Hay, Marnie, Bulmer Hobson and the nationalist movement in twentieth-century Ireland (Manchester, 2009).Google Scholar
Hebdige, Dick, Subculture (London, 1979).Google Scholar
Hennessey, Thomas, Dividing Ireland: World War One and partition (London, 1998).Google Scholar
Hill, Jacqueline, From Patriots to unionists: Dublin civic politics and Irish Protestant patriotism, 1660–1840 (Oxford, 1997).Google Scholar
Hill, Judith, Lady Gregory: an Irish life (Stroud, 2005).Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, Eric, Nations and nationalism since 1780: programme, myth, reality (Cambridge, 1990).Google Scholar
Hodges, E. C., A valiant life, 1864–1961 (Dublin, 1963).Google Scholar
Holroyd, Michael, Bernard Shaw: the one-volume definitive edition (London, 1998).Google Scholar
Hopkinson, Michael, Green against green: the Irish Civil War (Dublin, 1988).Google Scholar
Hopkinson, Michael, The Irish War of Independence (Dublin, 2002).Google Scholar
Hurley, Michael (ed.), Irish Anglicanism, 1869–1969: essays on the role of Anglicanism in Irish life, presented to the Church of Ireland on the occasion of the centenary of its disestablishment, by a group of Methodist, Presbyterian, Quaker, and Roman Catholic scholars (Dublin, 1970).Google Scholar
Hutchinson, John, The dynamics of cultural nationalism: the Gaelic Revival and the creation of the Irish nation state (London, 1987).Google Scholar
Inglis, Brian, Roger Casement (London, 1973).Google Scholar
Irish, Tomás, Trinity in war and revolution, 1912–1923 (Dublin, 2015).Google Scholar
Jackson, Alvin, The Ulster Party: Irish unionists in the House of Commons, 1884–1911 (Oxford, 1989).Google Scholar
Jackson, Alvin, Ireland, 1798–1998: war, peace, and beyond, 2nd ed. (West Sussex, 2010).Google Scholar
Jeffery, Keith, Ireland and the Great War (Cambridge, 2000).Google Scholar
Jones, Valerie, Rebel Prods: the forgotten story of Protestant radical nationalists and the 1916 Rising (Dublin, 2016).Google Scholar
Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. (ed.), Prosopography approaches and applications: a handbook (Oxford, 2007).Google Scholar
Kedourie, Elie, Nationalism (London, 1960).Google Scholar
Kelly, Aaron, Twentieth-century Irish literature (Basingstoke, 2008).Google Scholar
Kelly, M. J., The Fenian ideal and Irish nationalism, 1882–1916 (Woodbridge, 2006).Google Scholar
Kelly, Mary C., The shamrock and the lily: the New York Irish and the creation of a transatlantic identity, 1845–1921 (New York, 2005).Google Scholar
Keohane, Leo, Captain Jack White: imperialism, anarchism, and the Irish Citizen Army (Dublin, 2014).Google Scholar
Kiely, Kevin, Francis Stuart: artist and outcast (Dublin, 2007).Google Scholar
Kissane, Bill, The politics of the Irish Civil War (Oxford, 2005).Google Scholar
Krindatch, Alexei (ed.), Atlas of American Orthodox Christian Churches (Brookline, MA, 2011).Google Scholar
Laffan, Michael, The resurrection of Ireland: the Sinn Féin party, 1916–1923 (Cambridge, 1999).Google Scholar
Lane, Leeane, Rosamond Jacob: third person singular (Dublin, 2010).Google Scholar
Lynch, David, Radical politics in modern Ireland: the Irish Socialist Republican Party, 1896–1904 (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Lynd, Robert, I tremble to think (London, 1936).Google Scholar
Lynd, Robert, Galway of the races: selected essays (McMahon, Sean, ed.) (Dublin, 1990).Google Scholar
Lyons, F. S. L., Charles Stewart Parnell (London, 1977).Google Scholar
Lyons, F. S. L., Culture and anarchy in Ireland, 1890–1939 (Oxford, 1979).Google Scholar
MacDonagh, Oliver, States of mind: a study of Anglo-Irish conflict, 1780–1980 (London, 1985).Google Scholar
MacLellan, Anne, Dorothy Stopford Price: rebel doctor (Dublin, 2014).Google Scholar
Mansergh, Nicholas, The Irish question, 1840–1921 (London, 1965).Google Scholar
Martin, F. X. (ed.), The Irish Volunteers, 1913–1915: recollections and documents (Dublin, 1963).Google Scholar
Martin, F. X. (ed.), The Howth gun-running and the Kilcoole gun-running, 1914: recollections and documents (Dublin, 1964).Google Scholar
Martin, F. X. (ed.), Leaders and men of the Easter Rising: Dublin 1916 (Dublin, 1967).Google Scholar
Mathews, P. J., Revival: the Abbey Theatre, Sinn Féin, the Gaelic League and the Co-operative movement (Cork, 2003).Google Scholar
Maume, Patrick, D. P. Moran (Dundalk, 1995).Google Scholar
Maume, Patrick, The long gestation: Irish nationalist life 1891–1918 (Dublin, 1999).Google Scholar
Maye, Brian, Arthur Griffith (Dublin, 1997).Google Scholar
McBride, Ian, Eighteenth-century Ireland: the isle of slaves (Dublin, 2009).Google Scholar
McConnel, James, The Irish Parliamentary Party and the third home rule crisis (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
McCormack, W. J., Fool of the family: a life of J. M. Synge (London, 2000).Google Scholar
McCracken, Donal P., The Irish pro-Boers (Johannesburg, 1989).Google Scholar
McDowell, R. B., Alice Stopford Green: a passionate historian (Dublin, 1967).Google Scholar
McDowell, R. B., The Church of Ireland, 1869–1969 (London, 1975).Google Scholar
McDowell, R. B., Crisis and decline: the fate of the southern unionists (Dublin, 1997).Google Scholar
McDowell, R. B., and Webb, D. A., Trinity College Dublin, 1592–1952: an academic history (Dublin, 2004).Google Scholar
McGarry, Fearghal, The Rising: Easter 1916 (Oxford, 2010).Google Scholar
McGarry, Fearghal, The Abbey rebels of 1916: a lost revolution (Dublin, 2015).Google Scholar
McInerney, Michael, The riddle of Erskine Childers (Dublin, 1971).Google Scholar
McNulty, Eugene, The Ulster Literary Theatre and the northern revival (Cork, 2008).Google Scholar
Meenan, James, George O’Brien: a biographical memoir (Dublin, 1980).Google Scholar
Meleady, Dermot, John Redmond: the national leader (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
Mitchell, Arthur, Labour in Irish politics, 1890–1930: the Irish labour movement in an age of revolution (Dublin, 1974).Google Scholar
Moody, T. W., and Beckett, J. C., Queen’s, Belfast, 1845–1949: The history of a university, Vol. I (London, 1959).Google Scholar
Morgan, Austen, James Connolly: a political biography (Manchester, 1998).Google Scholar
Morris, Catherine, Alice Milligan and the Irish cultural revival (Dublin, 2012).Google Scholar
Mulholland, Marie, The politics and relationships of Kathleen Lynn (Dublin, 2002).Google Scholar
Murphy, Brian P., John Chartres: mystery man of the treaty (Dublin, 1995).Google Scholar
Murphy, Rose, Ella Young: Irish mystic and rebel: from literary Dublin to the American West (Dublin, 2008).Google Scholar
Murray, Christopher, Sean O’Casey: writer at work: a biography (Dublin, 2004).Google Scholar
Nevin, Donal, James Connolly: ‘a full life’ (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Norman, Diana, Terrible beauty: a life of Constance Markievicz (Dublin, 1988).Google Scholar
O’Brien, Bill, Alternative Ulster covenant (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
O’Brien, Conor Cruise, States of Ireland (London, 1972).Google Scholar
O’Brien, Eoin, and Crookshank, Ann, with Sir Wolstenholme, Gordon, A portrait of Irish medicine: an illustrated history of medicine in Ireland (Dublin, 1984).Google Scholar
Ó Broin, Leon, Protestant nationalists in revolutionary Ireland: the Stopford connection (Dublin, 1985).Google Scholar
Ó Comhraí, Cormac, Sa bhearna bhaoil: Gaillimh 1913–1923 (Gaillimh, 2015).Google Scholar
O’Connor, Ulick, Oliver St. John Gogarty (London, 1981 [1963]).Google Scholar
O Dúlaing, Donncha, Voices of Ireland: conversations with Donncha O Dúlaing (Dublin, 1984).Google Scholar
O’Faoláin, Seán, Constance Markievicz: or, the average revolutionary; a biography (London, 1934).Google Scholar
O’Halpin, Eunan, The decline of the union: British government in Ireland, 1892–1920 (Dublin, 1987).Google Scholar
O’Hegarty, P. S., A history of Ireland under the Union (London, 1952).Google Scholar
Ó hÓgartaigh, Margaret, Kathleen Lynn: Irishwoman, patriot, doctor (Dublin, 2006).Google Scholar
Ó Loingsigh, Pádraig, Gobnait Ní Bhruadair: the hon. Albinia Lucy Brodrick (Baile Átha Cliath, 1997).Google Scholar
Ó Mahony, Sean, Frongoch: university of revolution (Dublin, 1987).Google Scholar
O’Neill, Marie, Grace Gifford Plunkett and Irish freedom: tragic bride of 1916 (Dublin, 2000).Google Scholar
Ó Síocháin, Séamas, Roger Casement: imperialist, rebel, revolutionary (Dublin, 2008).Google Scholar
Ó Snodaigh, Pádraig, Hidden Ulster: Protestants and the Irish language (Belfast, 1995).Google Scholar
Ó Tuama, Seán (ed.), The Gaelic League idea (Cork, 1972).Google Scholar
Parkes, Susan M. (ed.), A danger to the men? a history of women in Trinity College Dublin 1904–2004 (Dublin, 2004).Google Scholar
Parkinson, Alan F., Belfast’s unholy war: the troubles of the 1920s (Dublin, 2004).Google Scholar
Parkinson, Alan F., Friends in high places: Ulster’s resistance to Irish home rule, 1912–14 (Belfast, 2012).Google Scholar
Paseta, Senia, Irish nationalist women, 1900–1918 (Cambridge, 2013).Google Scholar
Phoenix, Eamon, et al. (eds.), Feis na nGleann: a century of Gaelic culture in the Antrim Glens (Belfast, 2005).Google Scholar
Pilcher, Rosa, Trinity Hall, 1908–2008: Trinity College Dublin residence (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
Power, T. P., and Whelan, Kevin (eds.), Endurance and emergence: Catholics in Ireland in the eighteenth century (Dublin, 1990).Google Scholar
Pyle, Hilary, Red-headed rebel: Susan L. Mitchell: poet and mystic of the Irish cultural renaissance (Dublin, 1998).Google Scholar
Rauchbauer, Otto, Shane Leslie: sublime failure (Dublin, 2009).Google Scholar
Regan, John M., The Irish counter revolution, 1921–1936: Treatyite politics and settlement in independent Ireland (Dublin, 1999).Google Scholar
Regan-Lefebvre, Jennifer, Cosmopolitan nationalism in the Victorian Empire: Ireland, India and the politics of Alfred Webb (Basingstoke, 2009).Google Scholar
Reid, B. L., The lives of Roger Casement (New Haven, 1976).Google Scholar
Reid, Colin, The lost Ireland of Stephen Gwynn: Irish constitutional nationalism and cultural politics, 1864–1950 (Manchester, 2011).Google Scholar
Ryan, Meda, Tom Barry: IRA freedom fighter (Dublin, 2003).Google Scholar
Sagarra, Eda, Kevin O’Shiel: Tyrone nationalist and Irish state-builder (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
Saunders, Frances Stonor, The woman who shot Mussolini (London, 2011).Google Scholar
Saunders, Norah, and Kelly, A. A., Joseph Campbell: poet and nationalist, 1879–1944 (Dublin, 1988).Google Scholar
Smith, Anthony D., Nationalism and modernism: a critical survey of recent theories of nations and nationalism (London, 1998).Google Scholar
Smith, Nadia Clare, Dorothy Macardle: a life (Dublin, 2007).Google Scholar
Stanford, W. B., and McDowell, R. B., Mahaffy: a biography of an Anglo-Irishman (London, 1971).Google Scholar
Stewart, A. T. Q., The narrow ground: aspects of Ulster 1609–1969 (Belfast, 1997 [1977]).Google Scholar
Stoakley, T. E., Sneem: the knot of the ring (Sneem, 1986).Google Scholar
Taylor, Brian, The life and writings of James Owen Hannay (George A. Birmingham), 1865–1950 (New York, 1995).Google Scholar
Tiernan, Sonja, Eva Gore-Booth: an image of such politics (Manchester, 2012).Google Scholar
Tóibín, Colm, Lady Gregory’s toothbrush (Dublin, 2002).Google Scholar
Toomey, Thomas, The war of independence in Limerick 1912–1921: also covering actions in the border areas of Tipperary, Cork, Kerry and Clare (Limerick, 2010).Google Scholar
Townshend, Charles, Easter 1916: the Irish rebellion (London, 2005).Google Scholar
Townshend, Charles, The Republic: the fight for Irish independence, 1918–1923 (London, 2013).Google Scholar
Ungoed-Thomas, Jasper, Jasper Wolfe of Skibbereen (Cork, 2008).Google Scholar
Walsh, Margaret, Sam Maguire: the enigmatic man behind Ireland’s most prestigious trophy (Midleton, 2003).Google Scholar
Walsh, Oonagh, Anglican women in Dublin: philanthropy, politics and education in the early twentieth century (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Ward, Margaret, Maud Gonne: Ireland’s Joan of Arc (London, 1990).Google Scholar
Ward, Margaret, Unmanageable revolutionaries: women and Irish nationalism (London, 1995).Google Scholar
Welch, Robert, The Abbey Theatre, 1899–1999 (Oxford, 1999).Google Scholar
White, Jack, Minority report: the Protestant community in the Irish Republic (Dublin, 1975).Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Burke, The zeal of the convert (Gerrards Cross, 1978).Google Scholar
Wilson, T. K., Frontiers of violence: conflict and identity in Ulster and Upper Silesia 1918–1922 (Oxford, 2010).Google Scholar
Ashton, Philip, ‘Divided ideals: the Religious Society of Friends and the Irish home rule controversy, 1885–1886’, The Woodbrooke Journal, No. 6 (Summer 2000), 1–27.Google Scholar
Balliett, Conrad A., ‘The lives – and lies – of Maud Gonne’, Éire-Ireland, Fall, 1979, 17–44.Google Scholar
Bielenberg, Andy, ‘Exodus: the emigration of southern Irish Protestants during the Irish War of Independence and the Civil War’, Past & Present, Vol. 218, No. 1 (2013), 199233.Google Scholar
Bielenberg, Andy, Borgonovo, John and Donnelly, James S. Jr.‘Something of the Nature of a Massacre”: The Bandon Valley Killings Revisited’, Éire-Ireland 49, no. 3, (2014), 759.Google Scholar
Blanke, Richard, ‘“Polish-speaking Germans?”: language and national identity among the Masurians’, Nationalities Papers, Vol. 27, No. 3 (1999), 429453.Google Scholar
Bowman, John, ‘De Valera on Ulster, 1919-1920: what he told America’, Irish Studies in International Affairs, Vol. 1, No. 1 (1979), 318.Google Scholar
Boyle, John W., ‘The Belfast Protestant Association and the Independent Orange Order, 1901–10’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 13, No. 50 (September 1962), 117152.Google Scholar
Boyle, John W., ‘A Fenian Protestant in Canada: Robert Lindsay Crawford, 1910–22’, Canadian Historical Review, Vol. 52, No. 2 (June 1971), 165176.Google Scholar
Cuddy, Edward, ‘The Irish question and the revival of Anti-Catholicism in the 1920’s’, Catholic Historical Review, Vol. 67, No. 2 (April 1981), 236255.Google Scholar
Danaher, Kathleen, ‘Introduction to the plays of Gerald MacNamara’, Journal of Irish Literature, Vol. 17, Nos. 2–3 (May–September 1988), 320.Google Scholar
Davis, Richard, ‘Ulster Protestants and the Sinn Féin press, 1914–22’, Éire-Ireland, Winter 1980, 60–85.Google Scholar
De Bhaldraithe, Eoin, ‘Mixed marriages and Irish politics: the effect of “Ne Temere”’, Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, Vol. 77, No. 307 (Autumn, 1988), 284299.Google Scholar
Dixon, Roger, ‘Francis Joseph Bigger: Belfast’s cultural Don Quixote’, Ulster Folklife, Vol. 43, 1997, 4047.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, ‘The logic of collective sacrifice: Ireland and the British Army, 1914–1918’, The Historical Journal, Vol. 38, No. 4 (December 1995), 10171030.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, ‘Militarism in Ireland, 1900–1922’, in Bartlett, Thomas and Jeffery, Keith (eds.), A military history of Ireland (Cambridge, 1996), 379406.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, ‘Protestant depopulation and the Irish Revolution’, Irish Historical Studies 38, no. 152 (November 2013), 643663.Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom, ‘National identity in Ireland’, Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, Vol. 95, No. 379 (Autumn, 2006), 241250.Google Scholar
Gogarty, Oliver St John, ‘James Joyce: a portrait of the artist’, in Mikhail, E. H. (ed.), James Joyce: interviews and recollections (Basingstoke, 1990), 2132.Google Scholar
Gregory, Adrian, ‘“You might as well recruit Germans”: British public opinion and the decision to conscript the Irish in 1918’, in Gregory, Adrian and Pašeta, Senia (eds.), Ireland and the Great War: ‘a war to unite us all’? (Manchester, 2002), 113133.Google Scholar
Hanley, Brian, ‘The Irish Citizen Army after 1916’, Saothar, Vol. 28 (2003), 3747.Google Scholar
Hart, Peter, ‘The Protestant experience of revolution in Southern Ireland’, in English, Richard and Walker, Graham (eds.), Unionism in modern Ireland (Dublin, 1996), 8198.Google Scholar
Hart, Peter, ‘The social structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916–1923’, The Historical Journal, Vol. 42, No. 1 (March 1999), 207231.Google Scholar
Hay, Marnie, ‘The foundation and development of Na Fianna Éireann, 1909–16Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 36, No. 141 (May 2008), 5371.Google Scholar
Hayton, David, ‘Anglo-Irish attitudes: changing perceptions of national identity among the Protestant ascendancy in Ireland, ca. 1690–1740’, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, Vol. 17 (1987), 151152.Google Scholar
Hewitt, John, ‘“The northern Athens” and after’, in Beckett, J. C. et al., Belfast: the making of a city (Belfast, 1988), 7182.Google Scholar
Jones, Siobhan, ‘The Irish Protestant under the editorship of Lindsay Crawford, 1901–6’, Saothar, Vol. 30 (2005), 8596.Google Scholar
Kingston, Willie, ‘From Victorian boyhood to the troubles: a Skibbereen memoir’, Skibbereen and District Historical Society Journal, Vol. 1 (2005), 436.Google Scholar
Levitas, Ben, ‘A temper of misgiving: W. B. Yeats and the Ireland of Synge’s time’, in Paseta, Senia (ed.), Uncertain futures: essays about the Irish past for Roy Foster (Oxford, 2016), 110122.Google Scholar
Loughlin, James, ‘The Irish Protestant Home Rule Association and nationalist politics, 1886–93’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 24, No. 95 (May 1985), 341360.Google Scholar
Maguire, Martin, ‘A socio-economic analysis of the Dublin Protestant working class, 1870–1926’, Irish Economic and Social History, Vol. 20 (1993), 361.Google Scholar
Maguire, Martin, ‘Harry Nicholls and Kathleen Emerson: Protestant rebels’, Studia Hibernica, No. 35 (2008–2009), 147–166.Google Scholar
Martin, F. X., ‘1916: myth, fact, and mystery’, Studia Hibernica, No. 7 (1967), 7–126.Google Scholar
Maume, Patrick, ‘Anti-Machiavel: three Ulster nationalists of the age of de Valera’, Irish Political Studies, Vol. 14 (1999), 4363.Google Scholar
McGee, Owen, ‘Fred Allan (1861–1937): Republican, Methodist and Dubliner’, Dublin Historical Record, Vol. 56, No. 2 (Autumn, 2003), 205216.Google Scholar
McMahon, Timothy G., ‘“All creeds and all classes”? just who made up the Gaelic League?’, Éire-Ireland, Vol. 37, Nos. 3–4 (Fall–Winter, 2002), 118168.Google Scholar
Morris, Catherine, ‘In the enemy’s camp: Alice Milligan and fin de siècle Belfast’, in Allen, Nicholas and Kelly, Aaron (eds.), Cities of Belfast (Dublin, 2003), 6273.Google Scholar
Morrissey, Conor, ‘Albinia Brodrick: Munster’s Anglo-Irish Republican’, Journal of the Cork Archaeological and Historical Society, Vol. 116 (2011), 94108.Google Scholar
Morrissey, Conor, ‘“Much the more political of the two”: Mabel FitzGerald and the Irish Revolution’, Irish Studies Review, Vol. 24, No. 3 (2016), 291310.Google Scholar
Morrissey, Conor, ‘“Rotten Protestants”: Protestant home rulers and the Ulster Liberal Association, 1906–1918’, The Historical Journal, Vol. 61, No. 3 (September 2018), 743765.Google Scholar
Murphy, Brian P., ‘The Easter Rising in the context of censorship and propaganda with special reference to Major Ivon Price’, in Doherty, Gabriel and Keogh, Dermot (eds.), 1916: The long revolution (Cork, 2007), 141168.Google Scholar
Murray, Peter, ‘Radical way forward or sectarian cul-de-sac? Lindsay Crawford and Independent Orangeism reassessed’, Saothar, Vol. 27 (2002), 3142.Google Scholar
Newsinger, John, ‘“I bring not peace but a word”: the religious motif in the Irish War of Independence’, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 13, No. 3 (July 1978), 609662.Google Scholar
Nic Dháibhéid, Caoimhe, ‘“This is a case in which Irish nationalist considerations must be taken into account”: the breakdown of the MacBride–Gonne marriage, 1904–08’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 37, No. 146 (November 2010), 241264.Google Scholar
O’Brien, Maria, ‘Thomas William Rolleston: the forgotten man’, in FitzSimon, Betsey Taylor and Murphy, James H. (eds.), The Irish revival reappraised (Dublin, 2003), 154166.Google Scholar
Ó Conaire, Breandáin, ‘Na Protastúnaigh, an Ghaeilge agus Dubhghlas de hÍde’, Seanchas Ardmhaca: Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society, Vol. 15, No. 2 (1993), 130150.Google Scholar
Ó Corráin, Daithí, ‘“Ireland in his heart north and south”: the contribution of Ernest Blythe to the partition question’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 35, No. 137 (May 2006), 6180.Google Scholar
Ó Corráin, Daithí, ‘“They blew up the best portion of our city and … it is their duty to replace it”: compensation and reconstruction in the aftermath of the 1916 Rising’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 39, No. 154 (November 2014), 272295.Google Scholar
O’Halpin, Eunan, ‘H. E. Duke and the Irish administration, 1916–18’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 22, No. 88 (September 1981), 362376.Google Scholar
Paseta, Senia, ‘1798 in 1898: the politics of commemoration’, The Irish Review, No. 22 (Summer, 1998), 46–53.Google Scholar
Patterson, Henry, ‘Independent Orangeism and class conflict in Edwardian Belfast: a reinterpretation’, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section C: Archaeology, Celtic Studies, History, Linguistics, Literature, Vol. 80C (1980), 127.Google Scholar
Stone, Lawrence, ‘Prosopography’, Daedalus, Vol. 100, No. 1 (Winter, 1971), 4679.Google Scholar
Trench, C. E. F., ‘Dermot Chenevix Trench and Haines of Ulysses’, James Joyce Quarterly, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Fall, 1975), 3948.Google Scholar
Trench, R. B. D., ‘J. O. Hannay and the Gaelic League’, Hermathena, Vol. 102 (Spring, 1966), 2652.Google Scholar
Vandevelde, Karen, ‘An open national identity: Rutherford Mayne, Gerald MacNamara, and the plays of the Ulster Literary Theatre’, Éire-Ireland, Spring–Summer, 2004, 36–56.Google Scholar
Ward, Alan J., ‘Lloyd George and the 1918 Irish conscription crisis’, The Historical Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1 (March 1974), 256275.Google Scholar
Whyte, John H., ‘1916 – revolution and religion’, in Martin, F. X. (ed.), Leaders and men of the Easter Rising: Dublin 1916 (Dublin, 1967), 215226.Google Scholar
Zahra, Tara, ‘Imagined noncommunities: national indifference as a category of analysis’, Slavic Review, Vol. 69, No. 1 (Spring, 2010), 93119.Google Scholar
Coyle, Stephen, ‘Ian Graeme Baun MacKenzie Kennedy – “Scottie” 1899–1922: a Scottish Gael who died for the Irish Republic’, www.rsfcork.com/ianmackenziekennedy.htm.Google Scholar
‘A Short History of the Liberal Catholic Church and St. Raphael’s Parish’, http://srlcc.tripod.com/lcchist.htm.Google Scholar
McCann, Oliver, ‘The Protestant home rule movement, 1886–1895’, MA thesis, University College Dublin, 1972.Google Scholar
McConnel, James Richard Redmond, ‘The view from the backbench: Irish nationalist MPs and their work, 1910–1914’, PhD thesis, University of Durham, 2002.Google Scholar
McHenry, Margaret, ‘The Ulster theatre in Ireland’, PhD thesis, University of Pennsylvania, 1931.Google Scholar
Bateman, John, Great landowners of Great Britain and Ireland (London, 1876).Google Scholar
Burke, Bernard (ed.), A genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry of Ireland (London, 1904).Google Scholar
Burke, Bernard, Burke’s genealogical and heraldic history of the landed gentry of Ireland, 4th ed. (Pine, L. G., ed.) (London, 1958).Google Scholar
Burke’s Peerage and Baronetage, 105th ed. (London, 1970).Google Scholar
Castree, Noel, Kitchin, Rob, and Rogers, Alisdair, A dictionary of human geography (Oxford, 2013).Google Scholar
A catalogue of graduates of the University of Dublin, Vol. II (Dublin, 1896).Google Scholar
A catalogue of graduates of the University of Dublin, Vol. IV (Dublin, 1917).Google Scholar
A catalogue of graduates of the University of Dublin, Vol. V (Dublin, 1931).Google Scholar
Curtis, Edmund and McDowell, R. B. (eds.), Irish historical documents, 1172–1922 (New York, 1968).Google Scholar
De Burgh, U. H. Hussey, The Landowners of Ireland (Dublin, 1878).Google Scholar
Matthew, Colin, Harrison, Brian, and Goldman, Lawrence (eds.), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, 2004).Google Scholar
McGuire, James and Quinn, James (eds.), Dictionary of Irish biography (Cambridge, 2009).Google Scholar
Snoddy, Theo, Dictionary of Irish artists: 20th century (Dublin, 2002).Google Scholar
Vaughan, W. E., and Fitzpatrick, A. J., Irish historical statistics: population, 1821–1971 (Dublin, 1978).Google Scholar
Walford’s County Families of the United Kingdom, or Royal Manual of the Titled and Untitled Aristocracy of England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland (London, 1918).Google Scholar
Walker, Brian M. (ed.), Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland, 1801–1922 (Dublin, 1978).Google Scholar
Who Was Who, Vol. I: 1897–1915 (London, 1988).Google Scholar
Who Was Who, Vol. II: 1916–1928 (London, 1962).Google Scholar
Who Was Who, Vol. III: 1929–1940 (London, 1967).Google Scholar
[Various authors], Kerry’s fighting story, 1916–21 (Tralee, n.d. [1947]).Google Scholar
Akenson, Donald Harman, Small differences: Irish Catholics and Irish Protestants 1815–1922: an international perspective (Kingston, 1988).Google Scholar
Allen, Nicholas, George Russell (Æ) and the new Ireland, 1905–30 (Dublin, 2003).Google Scholar
Anderson, Benedict, Imagined communities: reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism (London, 1983).Google Scholar
Arrington, Lauren, Revolutionary lives: Constance and Casimir Markievicz (Princeton, 2016).Google Scholar
Armour, W. S., Armour of Ballymoney (London, 1934).Google Scholar
Bartlett, Thomas, The fall and rise of the Irish nation: the Catholic question, 1690–1830 (Dublin, 1992).Google Scholar
Beckett, J. C., The Anglo-Irish tradition (London, 1976).Google Scholar
Bell, Sam Hanna, Theatre in Ulster (Totowa, 1972).Google Scholar
Bence-Jones, Mark, Twilight of the ascendancy (London, 1987).Google Scholar
Beneš, Jakub S., Workers and nationalism: Czech and German social democracy in Habsburg Austria, 1890–1918 (Oxford, 2016).Google Scholar
Berresford Ellis, Peter, The Celtic dawn: a history of Pan Celticism (London, 1993).Google Scholar
Bew, Paul, C. S. Parnell (Dublin, 1980).Google Scholar
Bew, Paul, Enigma: a new life of Charles Stewart Parnell (Dublin, 2011).Google Scholar
Biagini, Eugenio, and Mulhall, Daniel (eds.), The shaping of modern Ireland: a centenary assessment (Sallins, 2016).Google Scholar
Bjork, James E., Neither German nor Pole: Catholicism and national indifference in a Central European borderland (Ann Arbor, MI, 2008).Google Scholar
Blaney, Roger, Presbyterians and the Irish language (Belfast, 1996).Google Scholar
Bourke, Marcus, John O’Leary: a study in Irish separatism (Tralee, 1967).Google Scholar
Bowman, John, De Valera and the Ulster question, 1917–1973 (Oxford, 1982).Google Scholar
Bowman, Timothy, Carson’s Army: the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1910–22 (Manchester, 2007).Google Scholar
Boyce, D. George, Nationalism in Ireland (London, 1995).Google Scholar
Boyd, Andrew, Jack White (1879–1946): first commander Irish Citizen Army (Belfast, 2001).Google Scholar
Boyle, Andrew, The riddle of Erskine Childers (London, 1977).Google Scholar
Bracken, David (ed.), The end of all things earthly: faith profiles of the 1916 leaders (Dublin, 2016).Google Scholar
Brooke, Peter, Ulster Presbyterianism: the historical perspective 1610–1970 (Dublin, 1987).Google Scholar
Brown, Terence, Ireland: a social and cultural history, 1922–79 (London, 1981).Google Scholar
Brown, Terence, The life of W. B. Yeats: a critical biography (Dublin, 1999).Google Scholar
Bryant, Chad, Prague in black: Nazi rule and Czech nationalism (Cambridge, MA, 2007).Google Scholar
Butler, Hubert, The sub-prefect should have held his tongue and other essays (Foster, R. F., ed.) (London, 1990).Google Scholar
Campbell, Fergus, The Irish establishment: 1879–1914 (Oxford, 2009).Google Scholar
Campbell, Flann, The dissenting voice: Protestant democracy in Ulster from plantation to partition (Dublin, 1991).Google Scholar
Canny, Nicholas, Making Ireland British, 1580–1650 (Oxford, 2001).Google Scholar
Carroll, F. M., American opinion and the Irish question, 1910–23: a study in opinion and policy (Dublin, 1978).Google Scholar
Clare, Anne, Unlikely rebels: the Gifford girls and the fight for Irish freedom (Cork, 2011).Google Scholar
Clark, Gemma, Everyday violence in the Irish Civil War (Cambridge, 2014).Google Scholar
Coffey, Diarmid, Douglas Hyde: president of Ireland (Dublin, 1938).Google Scholar
Comerford, R. V., Ireland (London, 2003).Google Scholar
Connolly, S. J., Religion, law and power: the making of Protestant Ireland, 1660–1760 (Oxford, 1992).Google Scholar
Coolahan, John, Irish education: its history and structure (Dublin, 1981).Google Scholar
Cullen Owens, Rosemary, Louie Bennett (Cork, 2001).Google Scholar
Daly, D. P., The young Douglas Hyde: the dawn of the Irish revolution and renaissance (Dublin, 1974).Google Scholar
Davis, Richard, Arthur Griffith and non-violent Sinn Fein (Dublin, 1974).Google Scholar
Dudgeon, Jeffrey, Roger Casement: the Black Diaries: with a study of his background, sexuality and Irish political life (Belfast, 2002).Google Scholar
Dunleavy, Janet Egleson, and Dunleavy, Gareth W., Douglas Hyde: a maker of modern Ireland (Berkeley, 1991).Google Scholar
Dwan, David, The great community: culture and nationalism in Ireland (Dublin, 2008).Google Scholar
Elliott, Marianne, Wolfe Tone: prophet of Irish independence (New Haven, 1989).Google Scholar
Elliott, Marianne, When God took sides: religion and identity in Ireland – unfinished identity (Oxford, 2009).Google Scholar
Ellmann, Richard, James Joyce: new and revised edition (Oxford, 1982 [1959]).Google Scholar
Emerson, Caryl, The Cambridge introduction to Russian literature (Cambridge, 2008).Google Scholar
English, Richard, Radicals and the republic: socialist republicanism in the Irish Free State, 1925–1937 (Oxford, 1994).Google Scholar
English, Richard, Irish freedom: the history of nationalism in Ireland (London, 2006).Google Scholar
Faivre, Antoine, Theosophy, imagination, tradition: studies in western esotericism (Rhone, Christine, trans.) (New York, 2000).Google Scholar
Farrell, Michael, Northern Ireland: the Orange state (London, 1976).Google Scholar
Fermanagh 1916 Centenary Association, Fearless but few: Fermanagh and the Easter Rising (Castleblayney, 2015).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, Politics and Irish life, 1913–1921: provincial experience of war and revolution, rev. ed. (Cork, 1998 [1977]).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, The two Irelands, 1912–1939 (Oxford, 1998).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, Harry Boland’s Irish revolution (Cork, 2003).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, Descendancy: Irish Protestant histories since 1795 (Cambridge, 2014).Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, Ernest Blythe in Ulster: the making of a double agent? (Cork, 2018).Google Scholar
Flanagan, Francis, Remembering the revolution: dissent, culture and nationalism in the Irish Free State (Oxford, 2015).Google Scholar
Forester, Margery, Michael Collins: the lost leader (Dublin, 1971).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Modern Ireland, 1600–1972 (London, 1988).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Paddy and Mr Punch: connections in Irish history and English history (London, 1993).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., W. B. Yeats: a life, Vol. I: the apprentice mage (Oxford, 1997).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., W. B. Yeats: a life, Vol. II: the arch-poet, 1915–1939 (Oxford, 2003).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Words alone: Yeats and his inheritances (Oxford, 2011).Google Scholar
Foster, R. F., Vivid faces: the revolutionary generation in Ireland, 1890–1923 (London, 2014).Google Scholar
Fox, R. M., Rebel Irishwomen (Cork, 1935).Google Scholar
Fox, R. M., The history of the Irish Citizen Army (Dublin, 1943).Google Scholar
Frazier, Adrian, Hollywood Irish: John Ford, Abbey actors and the Irish revival in Hollywood (Dublin, 2010).Google Scholar
Frazier, Adrian, The adulterous muse: Maud Gonne, Lucien Millevoye and W. B. Yeats (Dublin, 2016).Google Scholar
Gageby, Douglas, The last secretary general: Sean Lester and the League of Nations (Dublin, 1999).Google Scholar
Gailey, Andrew, Ireland and the death of kindness: the experience of constructive unionism, 1890–1905 (Cork, 1987).Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom, The evolution of Irish nationalist politics (Dublin, 1981).Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom, Nationalist revolutionaries in Ireland, 1858–1928 (Oxford, 1987).Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom, 1922: The birth of Irish democracy (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Gaughan, J. Anthony, Thomas Johnson, 1872–1963: first leader of the Labour Party in Dáil Éireann (Dublin, 1980).Google Scholar
Gellner, Ernest, Thought and change (London, 1964).Google Scholar
Gellner, Ernest, Nations and nationalism (Oxford, 1983).Google Scholar
Gray, John, City in revolt: James Larkin and the Belfast dock strike of 1907 (Belfast, 1985).Google Scholar
Gray, Randal, Kaiserschlacht: the final German offensive of World War One (Oxford, 1991).Google Scholar
Grosby, Steven, Nationalism: a very short introduction (New York, 2005).Google Scholar
Groves, Patricia, Petticoat rebellion: the Anna Parnell story (Cork, 2009).Google Scholar
Harrington, Niall C., Kerry landing: August 1922, An episode of the Civil War (Dublin, 1992).Google Scholar
Hart, Peter, The IRA and its enemies: violence and community in Cork, 1916–1923 (Oxford, 1998).Google Scholar
Hart, Peter, The IRA at war, 1916–1923 (Oxford, 2003).Google Scholar
Hastings, Adrian, The construction of nationhood: ethnicity, religion and nationalism (Cambridge, 1997).Google Scholar
Haverty, Anne, Constance Markievicz: an independent life (London, 1988).Google Scholar
Hay, Marnie, Bulmer Hobson and the nationalist movement in twentieth-century Ireland (Manchester, 2009).Google Scholar
Hebdige, Dick, Subculture (London, 1979).Google Scholar
Hennessey, Thomas, Dividing Ireland: World War One and partition (London, 1998).Google Scholar
Hill, Jacqueline, From Patriots to unionists: Dublin civic politics and Irish Protestant patriotism, 1660–1840 (Oxford, 1997).Google Scholar
Hill, Judith, Lady Gregory: an Irish life (Stroud, 2005).Google Scholar
Hobsbawm, Eric, Nations and nationalism since 1780: programme, myth, reality (Cambridge, 1990).Google Scholar
Hodges, E. C., A valiant life, 1864–1961 (Dublin, 1963).Google Scholar
Holroyd, Michael, Bernard Shaw: the one-volume definitive edition (London, 1998).Google Scholar
Hopkinson, Michael, Green against green: the Irish Civil War (Dublin, 1988).Google Scholar
Hopkinson, Michael, The Irish War of Independence (Dublin, 2002).Google Scholar
Hurley, Michael (ed.), Irish Anglicanism, 1869–1969: essays on the role of Anglicanism in Irish life, presented to the Church of Ireland on the occasion of the centenary of its disestablishment, by a group of Methodist, Presbyterian, Quaker, and Roman Catholic scholars (Dublin, 1970).Google Scholar
Hutchinson, John, The dynamics of cultural nationalism: the Gaelic Revival and the creation of the Irish nation state (London, 1987).Google Scholar
Inglis, Brian, Roger Casement (London, 1973).Google Scholar
Irish, Tomás, Trinity in war and revolution, 1912–1923 (Dublin, 2015).Google Scholar
Jackson, Alvin, The Ulster Party: Irish unionists in the House of Commons, 1884–1911 (Oxford, 1989).Google Scholar
Jackson, Alvin, Ireland, 1798–1998: war, peace, and beyond, 2nd ed. (West Sussex, 2010).Google Scholar
Jeffery, Keith, Ireland and the Great War (Cambridge, 2000).Google Scholar
Jones, Valerie, Rebel Prods: the forgotten story of Protestant radical nationalists and the 1916 Rising (Dublin, 2016).Google Scholar
Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. (ed.), Prosopography approaches and applications: a handbook (Oxford, 2007).Google Scholar
Kedourie, Elie, Nationalism (London, 1960).Google Scholar
Kelly, Aaron, Twentieth-century Irish literature (Basingstoke, 2008).Google Scholar
Kelly, M. J., The Fenian ideal and Irish nationalism, 1882–1916 (Woodbridge, 2006).Google Scholar
Kelly, Mary C., The shamrock and the lily: the New York Irish and the creation of a transatlantic identity, 1845–1921 (New York, 2005).Google Scholar
Keohane, Leo, Captain Jack White: imperialism, anarchism, and the Irish Citizen Army (Dublin, 2014).Google Scholar
Kiely, Kevin, Francis Stuart: artist and outcast (Dublin, 2007).Google Scholar
Kissane, Bill, The politics of the Irish Civil War (Oxford, 2005).Google Scholar
Krindatch, Alexei (ed.), Atlas of American Orthodox Christian Churches (Brookline, MA, 2011).Google Scholar
Laffan, Michael, The resurrection of Ireland: the Sinn Féin party, 1916–1923 (Cambridge, 1999).Google Scholar
Lane, Leeane, Rosamond Jacob: third person singular (Dublin, 2010).Google Scholar
Lynch, David, Radical politics in modern Ireland: the Irish Socialist Republican Party, 1896–1904 (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Lynd, Robert, I tremble to think (London, 1936).Google Scholar
Lynd, Robert, Galway of the races: selected essays (McMahon, Sean, ed.) (Dublin, 1990).Google Scholar
Lyons, F. S. L., Charles Stewart Parnell (London, 1977).Google Scholar
Lyons, F. S. L., Culture and anarchy in Ireland, 1890–1939 (Oxford, 1979).Google Scholar
MacDonagh, Oliver, States of mind: a study of Anglo-Irish conflict, 1780–1980 (London, 1985).Google Scholar
MacLellan, Anne, Dorothy Stopford Price: rebel doctor (Dublin, 2014).Google Scholar
Mansergh, Nicholas, The Irish question, 1840–1921 (London, 1965).Google Scholar
Martin, F. X. (ed.), The Irish Volunteers, 1913–1915: recollections and documents (Dublin, 1963).Google Scholar
Martin, F. X. (ed.), The Howth gun-running and the Kilcoole gun-running, 1914: recollections and documents (Dublin, 1964).Google Scholar
Martin, F. X. (ed.), Leaders and men of the Easter Rising: Dublin 1916 (Dublin, 1967).Google Scholar
Mathews, P. J., Revival: the Abbey Theatre, Sinn Féin, the Gaelic League and the Co-operative movement (Cork, 2003).Google Scholar
Maume, Patrick, D. P. Moran (Dundalk, 1995).Google Scholar
Maume, Patrick, The long gestation: Irish nationalist life 1891–1918 (Dublin, 1999).Google Scholar
Maye, Brian, Arthur Griffith (Dublin, 1997).Google Scholar
McBride, Ian, Eighteenth-century Ireland: the isle of slaves (Dublin, 2009).Google Scholar
McConnel, James, The Irish Parliamentary Party and the third home rule crisis (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
McCormack, W. J., Fool of the family: a life of J. M. Synge (London, 2000).Google Scholar
McCracken, Donal P., The Irish pro-Boers (Johannesburg, 1989).Google Scholar
McDowell, R. B., Alice Stopford Green: a passionate historian (Dublin, 1967).Google Scholar
McDowell, R. B., The Church of Ireland, 1869–1969 (London, 1975).Google Scholar
McDowell, R. B., Crisis and decline: the fate of the southern unionists (Dublin, 1997).Google Scholar
McDowell, R. B., and Webb, D. A., Trinity College Dublin, 1592–1952: an academic history (Dublin, 2004).Google Scholar
McGarry, Fearghal, The Rising: Easter 1916 (Oxford, 2010).Google Scholar
McGarry, Fearghal, The Abbey rebels of 1916: a lost revolution (Dublin, 2015).Google Scholar
McInerney, Michael, The riddle of Erskine Childers (Dublin, 1971).Google Scholar
McNulty, Eugene, The Ulster Literary Theatre and the northern revival (Cork, 2008).Google Scholar
Meenan, James, George O’Brien: a biographical memoir (Dublin, 1980).Google Scholar
Meleady, Dermot, John Redmond: the national leader (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
Mitchell, Arthur, Labour in Irish politics, 1890–1930: the Irish labour movement in an age of revolution (Dublin, 1974).Google Scholar
Moody, T. W., and Beckett, J. C., Queen’s, Belfast, 1845–1949: The history of a university, Vol. I (London, 1959).Google Scholar
Morgan, Austen, James Connolly: a political biography (Manchester, 1998).Google Scholar
Morris, Catherine, Alice Milligan and the Irish cultural revival (Dublin, 2012).Google Scholar
Mulholland, Marie, The politics and relationships of Kathleen Lynn (Dublin, 2002).Google Scholar
Murphy, Brian P., John Chartres: mystery man of the treaty (Dublin, 1995).Google Scholar
Murphy, Rose, Ella Young: Irish mystic and rebel: from literary Dublin to the American West (Dublin, 2008).Google Scholar
Murray, Christopher, Sean O’Casey: writer at work: a biography (Dublin, 2004).Google Scholar
Nevin, Donal, James Connolly: ‘a full life’ (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Norman, Diana, Terrible beauty: a life of Constance Markievicz (Dublin, 1988).Google Scholar
O’Brien, Bill, Alternative Ulster covenant (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
O’Brien, Conor Cruise, States of Ireland (London, 1972).Google Scholar
O’Brien, Eoin, and Crookshank, Ann, with Sir Wolstenholme, Gordon, A portrait of Irish medicine: an illustrated history of medicine in Ireland (Dublin, 1984).Google Scholar
Ó Broin, Leon, Protestant nationalists in revolutionary Ireland: the Stopford connection (Dublin, 1985).Google Scholar
Ó Comhraí, Cormac, Sa bhearna bhaoil: Gaillimh 1913–1923 (Gaillimh, 2015).Google Scholar
O’Connor, Ulick, Oliver St. John Gogarty (London, 1981 [1963]).Google Scholar
O Dúlaing, Donncha, Voices of Ireland: conversations with Donncha O Dúlaing (Dublin, 1984).Google Scholar
O’Faoláin, Seán, Constance Markievicz: or, the average revolutionary; a biography (London, 1934).Google Scholar
O’Halpin, Eunan, The decline of the union: British government in Ireland, 1892–1920 (Dublin, 1987).Google Scholar
O’Hegarty, P. S., A history of Ireland under the Union (London, 1952).Google Scholar
Ó hÓgartaigh, Margaret, Kathleen Lynn: Irishwoman, patriot, doctor (Dublin, 2006).Google Scholar
Ó Loingsigh, Pádraig, Gobnait Ní Bhruadair: the hon. Albinia Lucy Brodrick (Baile Átha Cliath, 1997).Google Scholar
Ó Mahony, Sean, Frongoch: university of revolution (Dublin, 1987).Google Scholar
O’Neill, Marie, Grace Gifford Plunkett and Irish freedom: tragic bride of 1916 (Dublin, 2000).Google Scholar
Ó Síocháin, Séamas, Roger Casement: imperialist, rebel, revolutionary (Dublin, 2008).Google Scholar
Ó Snodaigh, Pádraig, Hidden Ulster: Protestants and the Irish language (Belfast, 1995).Google Scholar
Ó Tuama, Seán (ed.), The Gaelic League idea (Cork, 1972).Google Scholar
Parkes, Susan M. (ed.), A danger to the men? a history of women in Trinity College Dublin 1904–2004 (Dublin, 2004).Google Scholar
Parkinson, Alan F., Belfast’s unholy war: the troubles of the 1920s (Dublin, 2004).Google Scholar
Parkinson, Alan F., Friends in high places: Ulster’s resistance to Irish home rule, 1912–14 (Belfast, 2012).Google Scholar
Paseta, Senia, Irish nationalist women, 1900–1918 (Cambridge, 2013).Google Scholar
Phoenix, Eamon, et al. (eds.), Feis na nGleann: a century of Gaelic culture in the Antrim Glens (Belfast, 2005).Google Scholar
Pilcher, Rosa, Trinity Hall, 1908–2008: Trinity College Dublin residence (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
Power, T. P., and Whelan, Kevin (eds.), Endurance and emergence: Catholics in Ireland in the eighteenth century (Dublin, 1990).Google Scholar
Pyle, Hilary, Red-headed rebel: Susan L. Mitchell: poet and mystic of the Irish cultural renaissance (Dublin, 1998).Google Scholar
Rauchbauer, Otto, Shane Leslie: sublime failure (Dublin, 2009).Google Scholar
Regan, John M., The Irish counter revolution, 1921–1936: Treatyite politics and settlement in independent Ireland (Dublin, 1999).Google Scholar
Regan-Lefebvre, Jennifer, Cosmopolitan nationalism in the Victorian Empire: Ireland, India and the politics of Alfred Webb (Basingstoke, 2009).Google Scholar
Reid, B. L., The lives of Roger Casement (New Haven, 1976).Google Scholar
Reid, Colin, The lost Ireland of Stephen Gwynn: Irish constitutional nationalism and cultural politics, 1864–1950 (Manchester, 2011).Google Scholar
Ryan, Meda, Tom Barry: IRA freedom fighter (Dublin, 2003).Google Scholar
Sagarra, Eda, Kevin O’Shiel: Tyrone nationalist and Irish state-builder (Dublin, 2013).Google Scholar
Saunders, Frances Stonor, The woman who shot Mussolini (London, 2011).Google Scholar
Saunders, Norah, and Kelly, A. A., Joseph Campbell: poet and nationalist, 1879–1944 (Dublin, 1988).Google Scholar
Smith, Anthony D., Nationalism and modernism: a critical survey of recent theories of nations and nationalism (London, 1998).Google Scholar
Smith, Nadia Clare, Dorothy Macardle: a life (Dublin, 2007).Google Scholar
Stanford, W. B., and McDowell, R. B., Mahaffy: a biography of an Anglo-Irishman (London, 1971).Google Scholar
Stewart, A. T. Q., The narrow ground: aspects of Ulster 1609–1969 (Belfast, 1997 [1977]).Google Scholar
Stoakley, T. E., Sneem: the knot of the ring (Sneem, 1986).Google Scholar
Taylor, Brian, The life and writings of James Owen Hannay (George A. Birmingham), 1865–1950 (New York, 1995).Google Scholar
Tiernan, Sonja, Eva Gore-Booth: an image of such politics (Manchester, 2012).Google Scholar
Tóibín, Colm, Lady Gregory’s toothbrush (Dublin, 2002).Google Scholar
Toomey, Thomas, The war of independence in Limerick 1912–1921: also covering actions in the border areas of Tipperary, Cork, Kerry and Clare (Limerick, 2010).Google Scholar
Townshend, Charles, Easter 1916: the Irish rebellion (London, 2005).Google Scholar
Townshend, Charles, The Republic: the fight for Irish independence, 1918–1923 (London, 2013).Google Scholar
Ungoed-Thomas, Jasper, Jasper Wolfe of Skibbereen (Cork, 2008).Google Scholar
Walsh, Margaret, Sam Maguire: the enigmatic man behind Ireland’s most prestigious trophy (Midleton, 2003).Google Scholar
Walsh, Oonagh, Anglican women in Dublin: philanthropy, politics and education in the early twentieth century (Dublin, 2005).Google Scholar
Ward, Margaret, Maud Gonne: Ireland’s Joan of Arc (London, 1990).Google Scholar
Ward, Margaret, Unmanageable revolutionaries: women and Irish nationalism (London, 1995).Google Scholar
Welch, Robert, The Abbey Theatre, 1899–1999 (Oxford, 1999).Google Scholar
White, Jack, Minority report: the Protestant community in the Irish Republic (Dublin, 1975).Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Burke, The zeal of the convert (Gerrards Cross, 1978).Google Scholar
Wilson, T. K., Frontiers of violence: conflict and identity in Ulster and Upper Silesia 1918–1922 (Oxford, 2010).Google Scholar
Ashton, Philip, ‘Divided ideals: the Religious Society of Friends and the Irish home rule controversy, 1885–1886’, The Woodbrooke Journal, No. 6 (Summer 2000), 1–27.Google Scholar
Balliett, Conrad A., ‘The lives – and lies – of Maud Gonne’, Éire-Ireland, Fall, 1979, 17–44.Google Scholar
Bielenberg, Andy, ‘Exodus: the emigration of southern Irish Protestants during the Irish War of Independence and the Civil War’, Past & Present, Vol. 218, No. 1 (2013), 199233.Google Scholar
Bielenberg, Andy, Borgonovo, John and Donnelly, James S. Jr.‘Something of the Nature of a Massacre”: The Bandon Valley Killings Revisited’, Éire-Ireland 49, no. 3, (2014), 759.Google Scholar
Blanke, Richard, ‘“Polish-speaking Germans?”: language and national identity among the Masurians’, Nationalities Papers, Vol. 27, No. 3 (1999), 429453.Google Scholar
Bowman, John, ‘De Valera on Ulster, 1919-1920: what he told America’, Irish Studies in International Affairs, Vol. 1, No. 1 (1979), 318.Google Scholar
Boyle, John W., ‘The Belfast Protestant Association and the Independent Orange Order, 1901–10’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 13, No. 50 (September 1962), 117152.Google Scholar
Boyle, John W., ‘A Fenian Protestant in Canada: Robert Lindsay Crawford, 1910–22’, Canadian Historical Review, Vol. 52, No. 2 (June 1971), 165176.Google Scholar
Cuddy, Edward, ‘The Irish question and the revival of Anti-Catholicism in the 1920’s’, Catholic Historical Review, Vol. 67, No. 2 (April 1981), 236255.Google Scholar
Danaher, Kathleen, ‘Introduction to the plays of Gerald MacNamara’, Journal of Irish Literature, Vol. 17, Nos. 2–3 (May–September 1988), 320.Google Scholar
Davis, Richard, ‘Ulster Protestants and the Sinn Féin press, 1914–22’, Éire-Ireland, Winter 1980, 60–85.Google Scholar
De Bhaldraithe, Eoin, ‘Mixed marriages and Irish politics: the effect of “Ne Temere”’, Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, Vol. 77, No. 307 (Autumn, 1988), 284299.Google Scholar
Dixon, Roger, ‘Francis Joseph Bigger: Belfast’s cultural Don Quixote’, Ulster Folklife, Vol. 43, 1997, 4047.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, ‘The logic of collective sacrifice: Ireland and the British Army, 1914–1918’, The Historical Journal, Vol. 38, No. 4 (December 1995), 10171030.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, ‘Militarism in Ireland, 1900–1922’, in Bartlett, Thomas and Jeffery, Keith (eds.), A military history of Ireland (Cambridge, 1996), 379406.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, David, ‘Protestant depopulation and the Irish Revolution’, Irish Historical Studies 38, no. 152 (November 2013), 643663.Google Scholar
Garvin, Tom, ‘National identity in Ireland’, Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, Vol. 95, No. 379 (Autumn, 2006), 241250.Google Scholar
Gogarty, Oliver St John, ‘James Joyce: a portrait of the artist’, in Mikhail, E. H. (ed.), James Joyce: interviews and recollections (Basingstoke, 1990), 2132.Google Scholar
Gregory, Adrian, ‘“You might as well recruit Germans”: British public opinion and the decision to conscript the Irish in 1918’, in Gregory, Adrian and Pašeta, Senia (eds.), Ireland and the Great War: ‘a war to unite us all’? (Manchester, 2002), 113133.Google Scholar
Hanley, Brian, ‘The Irish Citizen Army after 1916’, Saothar, Vol. 28 (2003), 3747.Google Scholar
Hart, Peter, ‘The Protestant experience of revolution in Southern Ireland’, in English, Richard and Walker, Graham (eds.), Unionism in modern Ireland (Dublin, 1996), 8198.Google Scholar
Hart, Peter, ‘The social structure of the Irish Republican Army, 1916–1923’, The Historical Journal, Vol. 42, No. 1 (March 1999), 207231.Google Scholar
Hay, Marnie, ‘The foundation and development of Na Fianna Éireann, 1909–16Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 36, No. 141 (May 2008), 5371.Google Scholar
Hayton, David, ‘Anglo-Irish attitudes: changing perceptions of national identity among the Protestant ascendancy in Ireland, ca. 1690–1740’, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, Vol. 17 (1987), 151152.Google Scholar
Hewitt, John, ‘“The northern Athens” and after’, in Beckett, J. C. et al., Belfast: the making of a city (Belfast, 1988), 7182.Google Scholar
Jones, Siobhan, ‘The Irish Protestant under the editorship of Lindsay Crawford, 1901–6’, Saothar, Vol. 30 (2005), 8596.Google Scholar
Kingston, Willie, ‘From Victorian boyhood to the troubles: a Skibbereen memoir’, Skibbereen and District Historical Society Journal, Vol. 1 (2005), 436.Google Scholar
Levitas, Ben, ‘A temper of misgiving: W. B. Yeats and the Ireland of Synge’s time’, in Paseta, Senia (ed.), Uncertain futures: essays about the Irish past for Roy Foster (Oxford, 2016), 110122.Google Scholar
Loughlin, James, ‘The Irish Protestant Home Rule Association and nationalist politics, 1886–93’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 24, No. 95 (May 1985), 341360.Google Scholar
Maguire, Martin, ‘A socio-economic analysis of the Dublin Protestant working class, 1870–1926’, Irish Economic and Social History, Vol. 20 (1993), 361.Google Scholar
Maguire, Martin, ‘Harry Nicholls and Kathleen Emerson: Protestant rebels’, Studia Hibernica, No. 35 (2008–2009), 147–166.Google Scholar
Martin, F. X., ‘1916: myth, fact, and mystery’, Studia Hibernica, No. 7 (1967), 7–126.Google Scholar
Maume, Patrick, ‘Anti-Machiavel: three Ulster nationalists of the age of de Valera’, Irish Political Studies, Vol. 14 (1999), 4363.Google Scholar
McGee, Owen, ‘Fred Allan (1861–1937): Republican, Methodist and Dubliner’, Dublin Historical Record, Vol. 56, No. 2 (Autumn, 2003), 205216.Google Scholar
McMahon, Timothy G., ‘“All creeds and all classes”? just who made up the Gaelic League?’, Éire-Ireland, Vol. 37, Nos. 3–4 (Fall–Winter, 2002), 118168.Google Scholar
Morris, Catherine, ‘In the enemy’s camp: Alice Milligan and fin de siècle Belfast’, in Allen, Nicholas and Kelly, Aaron (eds.), Cities of Belfast (Dublin, 2003), 6273.Google Scholar
Morrissey, Conor, ‘Albinia Brodrick: Munster’s Anglo-Irish Republican’, Journal of the Cork Archaeological and Historical Society, Vol. 116 (2011), 94108.Google Scholar
Morrissey, Conor, ‘“Much the more political of the two”: Mabel FitzGerald and the Irish Revolution’, Irish Studies Review, Vol. 24, No. 3 (2016), 291310.Google Scholar
Morrissey, Conor, ‘“Rotten Protestants”: Protestant home rulers and the Ulster Liberal Association, 1906–1918’, The Historical Journal, Vol. 61, No. 3 (September 2018), 743765.Google Scholar
Murphy, Brian P., ‘The Easter Rising in the context of censorship and propaganda with special reference to Major Ivon Price’, in Doherty, Gabriel and Keogh, Dermot (eds.), 1916: The long revolution (Cork, 2007), 141168.Google Scholar
Murray, Peter, ‘Radical way forward or sectarian cul-de-sac? Lindsay Crawford and Independent Orangeism reassessed’, Saothar, Vol. 27 (2002), 3142.Google Scholar
Newsinger, John, ‘“I bring not peace but a word”: the religious motif in the Irish War of Independence’, Journal of Contemporary History, Vol. 13, No. 3 (July 1978), 609662.Google Scholar
Nic Dháibhéid, Caoimhe, ‘“This is a case in which Irish nationalist considerations must be taken into account”: the breakdown of the MacBride–Gonne marriage, 1904–08’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 37, No. 146 (November 2010), 241264.Google Scholar
O’Brien, Maria, ‘Thomas William Rolleston: the forgotten man’, in FitzSimon, Betsey Taylor and Murphy, James H. (eds.), The Irish revival reappraised (Dublin, 2003), 154166.Google Scholar
Ó Conaire, Breandáin, ‘Na Protastúnaigh, an Ghaeilge agus Dubhghlas de hÍde’, Seanchas Ardmhaca: Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society, Vol. 15, No. 2 (1993), 130150.Google Scholar
Ó Corráin, Daithí, ‘“Ireland in his heart north and south”: the contribution of Ernest Blythe to the partition question’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 35, No. 137 (May 2006), 6180.Google Scholar
Ó Corráin, Daithí, ‘“They blew up the best portion of our city and … it is their duty to replace it”: compensation and reconstruction in the aftermath of the 1916 Rising’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 39, No. 154 (November 2014), 272295.Google Scholar
O’Halpin, Eunan, ‘H. E. Duke and the Irish administration, 1916–18’, Irish Historical Studies, Vol. 22, No. 88 (September 1981), 362376.Google Scholar
Paseta, Senia, ‘1798 in 1898: the politics of commemoration’, The Irish Review, No. 22 (Summer, 1998), 46–53.Google Scholar
Patterson, Henry, ‘Independent Orangeism and class conflict in Edwardian Belfast: a reinterpretation’, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy. Section C: Archaeology, Celtic Studies, History, Linguistics, Literature, Vol. 80C (1980), 127.Google Scholar
Stone, Lawrence, ‘Prosopography’, Daedalus, Vol. 100, No. 1 (Winter, 1971), 4679.Google Scholar
Trench, C. E. F., ‘Dermot Chenevix Trench and Haines of Ulysses’, James Joyce Quarterly, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Fall, 1975), 3948.Google Scholar
Trench, R. B. D., ‘J. O. Hannay and the Gaelic League’, Hermathena, Vol. 102 (Spring, 1966), 2652.Google Scholar
Vandevelde, Karen, ‘An open national identity: Rutherford Mayne, Gerald MacNamara, and the plays of the Ulster Literary Theatre’, Éire-Ireland, Spring–Summer, 2004, 36–56.Google Scholar
Ward, Alan J., ‘Lloyd George and the 1918 Irish conscription crisis’, The Historical Journal, Vol. 17, No. 1 (March 1974), 256275.Google Scholar
Whyte, John H., ‘1916 – revolution and religion’, in Martin, F. X. (ed.), Leaders and men of the Easter Rising: Dublin 1916 (Dublin, 1967), 215226.Google Scholar
Zahra, Tara, ‘Imagined noncommunities: national indifference as a category of analysis’, Slavic Review, Vol. 69, No. 1 (Spring, 2010), 93119.Google Scholar
Coyle, Stephen, ‘Ian Graeme Baun MacKenzie Kennedy – “Scottie” 1899–1922: a Scottish Gael who died for the Irish Republic’, www.rsfcork.com/ianmackenziekennedy.htm.Google Scholar
‘A Short History of the Liberal Catholic Church and St. Raphael’s Parish’, http://srlcc.tripod.com/lcchist.htm.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Conor Morrissey, University of Oxford
  • Book: Protestant Nationalists in Ireland, 1900–1923
  • Online publication: 11 October 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108596251.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Conor Morrissey, University of Oxford
  • Book: Protestant Nationalists in Ireland, 1900–1923
  • Online publication: 11 October 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108596251.011
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Conor Morrissey, University of Oxford
  • Book: Protestant Nationalists in Ireland, 1900–1923
  • Online publication: 11 October 2019
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108596251.011
Available formats
×