Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
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26 Osborough, W. N., ‘Catholics, land and the popery acts of Anne’, and Power, T. P., ‘Converts’, in Power, T. P. and Whelan, K. (eds.), Endurance and emergence: catholics in Ireland in the eighteenth century (Dublin, 1990), pp. 21–56, 101–28Google Scholar.
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35 For example, the forthcoming book of Cadoc Leighton, and the Cambridge Ph.D. of Éamon Ó 6 Ciardha on popular Jacobitism after Aughrim. Meanwhile, for a foretaste of the latter's approach see his ‘Woodkerne, tories and rapparees in Ulster and north Connacht in the seventeenth century’, unpublished M.A. dissertation, University College Dublin (1991)Google Scholar.
36 Buttimer, C. G., ‘Gaelic literature and contemporary life in Cork, 1700–1840’, in O'Flanagan, P. and Buttimer, C. G. (eds.), Cork: history and society (Dublin, 1993), pp. 585–654Google Scholar; Cullen, , ‘Patrons, teachers and literacy in Irish, 1700–1850’, in Dickson, D. and Daly, M. (eds.), The origins of popular literacy in Ireland (Dublin, 1990), pp. 15–44Google Scholar; ÓBuachalla, B., ‘The making of a Cork Jacobite’, in O'Flanagan, and Buttimer, (eds.), Cork, pp. 469–98;Google ScholarÓ, Buachalla, ‘Na Stíobhartaigh agus an t-aos léinn: Cing Séamas’, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, LXXXIII C (1983), 81–134Google Scholar; Ó, Buachalla, ‘Irish Jacobite poetry’, The Irish Review, XII (1992), 40–9Google Scholar; Whelan, K., ‘The united Irishmen, the enlightenment and popular culture’, in Dickson, D., Keogh, D. and Whelan, K. (eds.), The united Irishmen: radicalism, republicanism and revolution (Dublin, forthcoming)Google Scholar.
37 Brennan, J., ‘A Gallican interlude in Ireland’, Irish Theological Quarterly, XXIV (1957), 219–37, 283–309CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kearney, H., ‘Ecclesiastical politics and the counter-reformation in Ireland’, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, XI (1960), 202–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Dr Hayton, however, suggests these divisions can be overplayed in the events of 1688–91: ‘The Williamite revolution in Ireland’, pp. 193–5.
38 The main advance since Brady, J. and Corish, P. J., The church under the penal code (Dublin, 1971)Google Scholar andCorish, P. J., The Catholic community in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (Dublin, 1981)Google Scholar, is Power and Whelan, Endurance and emergence.
39 ‘The Catholic church in the diocese of Ardagh, 1650–1870’, in Gillespie, R. G. and Moran, G. (eds.), Longford: essays in county history (Dublin, 1991), pp. 63–91Google Scholar; ‘The Catholic church in County Kilkenny 1600–1800’, in Nolan, W. and Whelan, K. (eds.), Kilkenny: history and society (Dublin, 1990), pp. 197–259Google Scholar. Also Whelan, , ‘The Catholic Church in County Tipperary’, pp. 215–55Google Scholar; idem, ‘The role of the priests in the 1798 rebellion in County Wexford’, in Whelan (ed.), Wexford: history and society (Dublin, 1987), pp. 296–315.
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41 Fagan, P., Dublin's turbulent priest: Cornelius Mary 1658–1738 (Dublin, 1991)Google Scholar. See, too, Coombes, J., A bishop of the penal times… John O'Brien, bishop ofCloyne and Ross, 1701–1769 (Cork, 1981)Google Scholar.
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45 Lecky had first focused attention on these activities: A history of Ireland in the eighteenth century, new edition (5 vols., London, 1916), I, 286–90, 330, 370Google Scholar; Cullen, , Emergence, pp. 123, 193–209Google Scholar; Connolly, , Religion, law and power, pp. 65–7, 228–30Google Scholar; Barnard, ‘Athlone, 1685’; Fagan, P., ‘The Dublin Catholic mob (1700–1750)’, Eighteenth-century Ireland, IV (1989), 133–42Google Scholar. Dr James Kelly is working on duelling and abductions.
46 Religious beliefs are sensitively examined by Hempton, D. and Hill, M., Evangelical protestantism in Ulster society 1740–1890 (London, 1992)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Liechty, J., ‘Irish evangelicalism, Trinity College Dublin, and the mission of the Church of Ireland at the end of the eighteenth century’, unpublished Ph.D., St Patrick's College, Maynooth (1987)Google Scholar. Two books with important implications for our approach to religious life in eighteenth-century Ireland are: Hall, David, Days of Wonder, Days of Judgment (New York, 1989)Google Scholar; and Ward, W. R., The Protestant evangelical awakening (Cambridge, 1992)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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51 D. W. Hayton, ‘The beginnings of the “undertaker system”’, in Bartlett, and Hayton, , Penal era and golden age, pp. 32–54Google Scholar; idem, ‘Walpole and Ireland’, in Jeremy Black (ed.), Britain in the age of Walpole (London, 1984), pp. 95–119; idem (and D. Szechi), ‘John Bull's other kingdoms: Scotland and Ireland’, in Clyve Jones (ed.), Britain in the first age of party 1680–1750 (London, 1987), pp. 259–79. Valuable on the patriotic mode: Leerssen, J. T., ‘Anglo-Irish patriotism and its European context: notes towards a reassessment’, Eighteenth-century Ireland, III (1988), 7–24Google Scholar. Also McCoy, J. G., ‘Court ideology in mid-eighteenth century Ireland’, unpublished M.A., St Patrick's College, Maynooth (1990)Google Scholar.
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53 Other recent work on high politics includes: Bell, Liam, ‘The Irish Parliament of 1727–9’, unpublished M.A. dissertation, University College Dublin (1992)Google Scholar; Doyle, T. G., ‘Parliament and politics in Williamite Ireland 1690–1703’, unpublished M.A., University College Dublin, 1992Google Scholar; Griffin, J., ‘Parliamentary politics in Ireland during the reign of George I’, unpublished M.A., University College Dublin (1977)Google Scholar; Lammey, D., ‘A study in Anglo-Irish relations between 1772 and 1782, with particular reference to the “free trade” movement’, Ph.D. thesis, Queen's University, Belfast (1984)Google Scholar; Troost, W., William III and the Treaty of Limerick (1691–1697) (Leiden, 1983)Google Scholar.
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55 ‘An economic history.’ Some parts of his findings appear in ‘Property and social structure in eighteenth-century south Munster’, in Cullen, L. M. and Furet, F. (eds.), Irlande et France XVIIe–XXe siècles: pour une histoire rurale comparée (Paris, 1977), pp. 129–38Google Scholar; ‘The Cork merchant community in the eighteenth century: a regional perspective’, in Cullen, L. M. and Butel, P., Négoce et Industrie, pp. 45–50Google Scholar; ‘Huguenots in the economy in eighteenth-century Dublin and Cork’, inCaldicott, C. E. J., Gough, H. and Pittion, J. P. (eds.), The Huguenots and Ireland (Dun Laoghaire, 1987), pp. 321–32Google Scholar; ‘“Centres of motion”: Irish cities and the origins of popular polities’, in Bergeron, L. and Cullen, L. M. (eds.), Culture et pratiques politiques en France et Irlande: XVI–XVIII siècles (Paris, 1990), pp. 101–22Google Scholar.
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57 In addition to his works listed in the bibliography of New history of Ireland, IV, 768, see: ‘The evolution of the linen industry in Ulster before industrialization’, Irish Economic and Social History, XV (1988), 32–53Google Scholar; ‘The political economy of linen: Ulster in the eighteenth century’, in Brady, C., O'Dowd, M. and Walker, B. (eds.), Ulster: an illustrated history (London, 1989), pp. 134–57Google Scholar; ‘The significance of landed estates in Ulster, 1600–1820’, Irish Economic and Social History, XVII (1990), 44–61Google Scholar. Other illuminating work on the province includes: Clarkson, L. A., ‘Household and family structure in Armagh city’, Local Population Studies, XX (1978), 14–31Google Scholar; idem, ‘An anatomy of an Irish town: the economy of Armagh, 1770’, Irish Economic and Social History, V (1978), 27–45; idem, and E. M. Crawford, Ways to wealth: the Cust family of eighteenth-century Armagh (Belfast, 1985), and the articles by P. Roebuck cited in notes 73 and 75.
58 The series under the general editorship of William Nolan, of which Tipperary, Wexford (edited with K. Whelan); Kilkenny (again edited with K. Whelan); Waterford (with T. P. Power) and Cork (edited by P. O'Flanagan and C. G. Buttimer) have so far been published. Galway, Wicklow and Donegal are well advanced, and Down and Offaly are known to be in gestation. Other ventures include: Gillespie, R. G. and Moran, G. (eds.), ‘A various country’: essays in Mayo history 1500–1900 (Westport, 1987)Google Scholar; Gillespie, and Moran, , Longford; Gillespie, and O'Sullivan, H. (eds.), The borderlands: essays on the Ulster–Leinster border (Belfast, 1989)Google Scholar. The high quality of some, more local studies is demonstrated by Harrison, R. S., Cork city Quakers 1655–1939 (no place, 1991)Google Scholar, and the contributions to Séanchas Chairbre, III (1993)Google Scholar.
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76 The Hiberno-Gallic encounters have resulted in four volumes of proceedings: Furet and Cullen, Irlande et France; Butel and Cullen, Négoce et Industrie; Butel and Cullen, Cities and merchants; Bergeron and Cullen, Culture et pratiques politiques; the Scots–Irish meetings, three: Cullen, L. M. and Smout, T. C., Comparative aspects of Scottish and Irish economic and social history 1600–1900 (Edinburgh, 1978)Google Scholar; Devine and Dickson, Ireland and Scotland 1600–1850; Mitchison and Roebuck, Economy and society.
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83 Apart from the influential articles by Berman, David, ‘Enlightenment and counter-enlightenment in Irish philosophy’ and ‘The culmination and causation of Irish philosophy’, Archiv fũr Geschichte der Philosophie, LXIV (1982), 148–65, 257–79Google Scholar, there are meticulous reconstructions in Kelly, P. H., ‘William Molyneux and the spirit of liberty in eighteenth-century Ireland’, Eighteenth-century Ireland, III (1988), 133–48Google Scholar; idem, ‘Perceptions of Locke in eighteenth-century Ireland’, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, LXXXIX C (1989), 2–35; Stewart, M. A., ‘John Smith and the Molesworth circle’, Eighteenth-century Ireland, II (1987), 89–102Google Scholar. Late eighteenth-century currents are skilfully charted by J. Liechty in ‘Irish evangelicalism’. A little of the extended reach of Trinity College Dublin is suggested by Barnard, T. C., ‘Provost Huntington's injunctions to the schoolmasters in 1684’, Hermathena, CXIX (1975), 71–3Google Scholar; S. Ó Seanóir and M. Pollard, ‘“A great deal of good verse”’: commencement entertainments in the 1680s’, ibid, CXXX, CXXXI (1981), 7–36.
84 In addition to the bibliography in the New history IV, an expert guide for the history of buildings is McParland, E., ‘A bibliography of Irish architectural history’, Irish Historical Studies, XXVI (1988), 161–212CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Valuable introductions to particular topics are offered in Bennett, D., Collecting Irish silver 1627–1900 (London, 1984), especially pp. 123–58Google Scholar; Boydell, B., A Dublin musical calendar, 1700–1760 (Dublin, 1988)Google Scholar; Dunleavy, M., Ceramics in Ireland (Dublin, 1988)Google Scholar; idem, Dress in Ireland (London, 1989); idem, ‘Samuel Madden and the scheme for the encouragement of useful manufactures’, in Bernelle, A. (ed.), Decantations: a tribute in honour of Maurice Craig (Dublin, 1992), pp. 21–8Google Scholar; Nelson, E. C., ‘Sir Arthur Rawdon (1662–1695) of Moira’, Proceedings and Reports of the Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society, 2nd ser., X, for 1977–82 (1983), 30–52Google Scholar; idem, ‘The Dublin Florists’ Club in the mid eighteenth century’, Garden History, X (1982), 142–8; idem, ‘“This garden to adorne with all varietie”: the garden plants of Ireland in the centuries before 1700’, Moorea, IX (1990), 37–54; Potterton, H., Irish church monuments 1570–1880 (Belfast, 1975)Google Scholar.
85 Barnard, T. C., ‘Gardening, diet and “improvement” in later seventeenth-century Ireland’, Journal of Garden History, X (1990), 71–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, ‘Cork settlers’.
86 A particularly effective recent evocation of the physical and mental worlds of an eighteenth-century Irish Protestant is Dunne, T., ‘“A gentleman's estate should be a moral school”: Edgeworthstown in fact and fiction, 1760–1840’, in Gillespie, and Moran, , Longford, pp. 95–122Google Scholar. Other studies which try to make more of the material background are: Barnard, ‘Cork settlers’; idem, ‘Land and the limits of loyalty’.
87 As well as the work cited in note 84 Dublin printing has been wonderfully illuminated by Pollard, M., Dublin's trade in books 1550–1800 (Dublin, 1989)Google Scholar.
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90 A bibliography of her publications (to 1985) is in Fenlon, J., Figgis, N. and Marshall, C. (eds.), New perspectives: studies in art history in honour of Anne Crookshank (Dublin, 1987), pp. 11–13Google Scholar. Notable are: (with the Knight of Glin), Irish portraits 1660–1860 (London, 1969)Google Scholar; ‘Early landscape painters in Ireland’, Country Life (24 Aug. 1972), pp. 468–72; (with the Knight of Glin), The painters of Ireland 1660–1920 (London, 1978)Google Scholar; ‘James Latham (1696–1747)’, Irish Arts Review (1988), pp. 56–72; ‘The conversation piece in Irish painting in the eighteenth century’, in Bernelle, , Decantations, pp. 16–20Google Scholar.
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96 Breffny, B. de and ffolliott, R., The houses of Ireland (London, 1975)Google Scholar, and Bence-Jones, M., Burke's guide to country houses. I. Ireland (London, 1978)Google Scholar, help.