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Ireland

Ireland

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Thomas Bartlett
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Reprint, 6/30/2011
EAN 9781107422346, ISBN10: 1107422345

Paperback, 642 pages, 24.7 x 17.4 x 3.7 cm
Language: English

Ireland has rarely been out of the news during the past thirty years. Whether as a war-zone in which Catholic nationalists and Protestant Unionists struggled for supremacy, a case study in conflict resolution or an economy that for a time promised to make the Irish among the wealthiest people on the planet, the two Irelands have truly captured the world's imagination. Yet single-volume histories of Ireland are rare. Here, Thomas Bartlett, one of the country's leading historians, sets out a fascinating new history that ranges from prehistory to the present. Integrating politics, society and culture, he offers an authoritative historical road map that shows exactly how – and why – Ireland, north and south, arrived at where it is today. This is an indispensable guide to both the legacies of the past for Ireland's present and to the problems confronting north and south in the contemporary world.

1. Early Ireland, AD 431–1169
2. From lordship to kingdom
Ireland, 1169–1541
3. The making of Protestant Ireland, 1541–1691
4. Ireland's long eighteenth century, 1691–1830
5. From Union to disunion
Ireland, 1830–1914
6. The making of the two Irelands, 1914–1945
7. Hubris and nemesis
the two Irelands, 1945–2010.

'Based on wide reading, clearly structured, elegantly expressed, spiced with a sardonic wit, steering a skilful course through the treacherous ideological rapids of Irish historiography, Bartlett's Ireland deserves to become a classic.' J. Joseph Lee, New York University and author of Ireland 1912-1985