Conference 19, Historical Studies XVII

Conference:

19th Irish Conference of Historians, Trinity College Dublin, 8-10 June 1989

Proceedings:

Ciaran Brady (ed.), Historical Studies XVII: papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, held in Dublin on 8-10 June 1989 (Dublin: The Lilliput Press Ltd., 1991)

Table of Contents:

Preface p. vii

Previous Volumes in the Series p. viii

Contributors p. ix

Introduction pp. 1-10

Part One

Bernadette Cunningham, Librarian, Dublin Diocesan Library, ‘The Culture and Ideology of Irish Franciscan Historians at Louvain 1607-1650’, pp. 11-30

Eamon O’Flaherty, Lecturer in Modern History, University College, Dublin, ‘The Theatre of Diversity: Historical Criticism and Religious Controversy in Seventeenth-Century France’, pp. 31-48

Bertram Wyatt-Brown, Professor of History, University of Florida, ‘Honour and American Republicanism: A Neglected Corollary’, pp. 49-65

Dorinda Outram, Lecturer in History, University College, Cork, ‘‘Rousseau’s Stutter’: The French Revolution, Philosophy and the History of the Future’, pp. 66-76

W.J. McCormack, free-lance author, ‘The Tedium of History: An Approach to Maria Edgeworth’s Patronage (1814), pp. 77-98

Luke Gribbons, Lecturer in Communications, Dublin City University, ‘’ A shadowy Narrator’: History, Art and Romantic Nationalism in Ireland 1750-1850’, pp. 99-127

Stefan Collini, University Lecturer in English, Cambridge University, ‘Genealogies of Englishness: Literary History and Cultural Criticism in Modern Britain’, pp. 128-145

Ian Green, Senior Lecturer in History, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘’Repulsives vs Wromantics’: Rival Views of the English Civil War’, pp. 146-167

David Fitzpatrick, Lecturer in Modern History, Trinity College, Dublin, ‘The Futility of History: A Failed Experiment in Irish Education’, pp. 168-186

Part Two

Ivan Berend, President, Hungarian Academy of Sciences 1985-9, ‘History as a Scholarly Discipline and Magistra Vitae’, pp. 187-198

John Lukacs, Professor of History, Chestnut Hill, Pennsylvania, ‘Polite Letters and Clio’s Fashions’, pp. 199-210

Aidan Clarke, Professor of Modern History, Trinity College, Dublin, ‘A Commentary on John Lukac’s ‘Polite Letters’’, pp. 211-220

Notes, pp. 221-265

Index, pp. 265

Conference 17, Historical Studies XVI

Conference:
17th Irish Conference of Historians, University College Cork, 1985

Proceedings:
Tom Dunne (ed.), Historical Studies XVI: papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, held in Cork, 23-26 May 1985 (Cork: Cork University Press, 1987)

Table of Contents:

Preface, pp. ix

Historical Studies: Publishing History, pp. x

Contributors, pp. xi

Tom Dunne, Lecturer in Irish History, University College, Cork, ‘A polemical introduction: literature, literary theory and the historian’, pp. 1-9

Charles Doherty, Lecturer in Early and Medieval Irish History, University College, Dublin, ‘The Irish Hagiographer: resources, aims, results’, pp. 10-22

Donnchach O Corrain, Associate Professor of Irish History, University College, Cork, ‘Legend as critic’, pp. 23-38

John Scattergood, Professor of Medieval and Renaissance English, Trinity College, Dublin, ‘Winner and waster and the mid-fourteenth century economy’, pp. 39-57

Katharine Simms, Lecturer in Medieval History, trinity College, Dublin, ‘Bardic poetry as a historical source’, pp. 58-75

Brendan Bradshaw, Fellow of Queen’s College, Cambridge, ‘Edmund Spenser on Justice and Mercy’, pp. 76-89

Seamus Deane, Professor of Modern English and American Literature, University College, Dublin, ‘Irish national character 1790-1900’, pp. 90-113

Oliver Macdonagh, Professor of History, The Institute of Advanced Studies, Australian National University, Canberra, ‘Sandition: a Regency novel?’, pp. 114-132

Tom Dunne, Lecturer in Irish History, University College, Cork, ‘Fiction as ‘the best history of nations’: Lady Morgan’s Irish novels’, pp. 133-159

Eda Sagarra, Professor of German, Trinity College, Dublin, ‘Jewish emancipation in nineteenth-century Germany and the stereotyping of the Jew in Gustav Freytag’s Soll und Haben(1855), pp. 160-176

David Hempton, Lecturer in Modern History, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘Popular religion and irreligion in Victorian fiction’, pp. 177-196

Owen Dudley Edwards, Reader in American History, University of Edinburgh, ‘Mark Twain: historian of a lost world’, pp. 197-226

Lawrence J. McCaffrey, Professor of History, Loyola University of Chicago, ‘Fictional images of Irish-America’, pp. 227-xx

Conference 16, Historical Studies XV

Conference:
16th Irish Conference of Historians, Maynooth, 1983

Proceedings:
Patrick J. Corish (ed.), Historical Studies XV: papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, held in Maynooth on 16-19 June 1983 (Belfast: Appletree Press, 1985)

Table of Contents:

Preface, pp. 7-8

Introduction, pp. 9-11

Ciaran Brady, Lecturer in Modern History, University of Dublin, ‘Conservative subversives: the community of the Pale and the Dublin administration, 1556-86’, pp. 11-32

Christopher Hill, formerly Master of Balliol College, Oxford, ‘Seventeenth-century English radicals and Ireland’, pp. 33-50

S.J. Connolly, Lecturer in History, New University of Ulster, ‘Law, order and popular protest in early eighteenth-century Ireland: the case of the Houghers’, pp. 51-68

Marianne Elliott, Research Fellow, Department of History, University of Liverpool, ‘The United Irishman as a diplomat’, pp. 69-90

L.M. Cullen, Professor of Modern Irish History, University of Dublin, ‘The 1798 rebellion in its eighteenth-century context’, pp. 91-114

Thomas Bartlett, Lecturer in History, University College, Galway, ‘Indiscipline and disaffection in the armed forces in Ireland in the 1790s’, pp. 115-134

Hugh Gough, Lecturer in History, University College, Dublin, ‘The radical press in the French Revolution’, pp. 135-150

James. S. Donnelly, Jr, Professor of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison, ‘The social composition of agrarian rebellions in early nineteenth-century Ireland: the case of the Carders and Caravats, 1813-16’, pp. 151-170

Patrick J. Corish, Professor of Modern History, St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, ‘The radical face of Paul Cardinal Cullen’, pp. 171-184

Mary Cullen, Lecturer in Modern History, St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth, ‘How radical was Irish feminism between 1860 and 1920?’, pp. 185-202

Michael Laffan, Lecturer in Modern Irish History, University College, Dublin, ‘Labour must wait: Ireland’s conservative revolution’, pp 203-222

Denis Smyth, Lecturer in Modern History, University College, Cork, ‘We are with you: solidarity and self-interest in Soviet policy towards Republican Spain, 1936-39’, pp. 223-xx

Conference 15, Historical Studies XIV

Conference:
15th Irish Conference of Historians, University College Dublin, 27-30 May 1981

Proceedings:
Art Cosgrove and James McGuire (eds), Parliament and community… papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, Dublin, 27-30 May 1981: Historical Studies XIV (Belfast, 1983).

Conference 14, Historical Studies XIII

Conference:
14th Irish Conference of Historians, Queen’s University Belfast, 30 May – 2 June 1979

Proceedings:
David Harkness and Mary O’Dowd (ed.), Historical Studies XIII: papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, held in Belfast on 30 May -2 June 1979 (Belfast: Appletree Press, 1981).

Table of Contents:

Preface, pp. vii

David Harkness, Professor of Irish History and Mary O’Dowd, Lecturer in Modern History, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘Introduction’, pp. 1-6

Gearoid MacNiocaill, Professor of History, University College, Galway, ‘Socio-Economic Problems of the Late Medieval Irish Town’, pp. 7-22

Geoffrey Martin, Professor of History, University of Leicester, ‘Plantation Boroughs in Medieval Ireland, with a handlist of boroughs to c.1500’, pp. 23-54

R.J. Hunter, Lecturer in History, University of Ulster, ‘Ulster Plantation Towns, 1609-41’, pp. 55-80

Leslie Clarkson, Reader in Economic and Social History, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘Armagh 1770: Portrait of an Urban Community’, pp. 81-102

Peter Jupp, Senior Lecturer in History, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘Urban Politics in Ireland, 1801-31’, pp. 103-124

Maura Murphy, Lecturer in History, Mary Immaculate College of Education, Limerick, ‘ The Economic and Social Structure of Nineteenth Century Cork’, pp. 125-154

Peter Froggatt, Vice-Chancellor, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘Industrialisation and Health in Belfast in the Early Nineteenth Century’, pp. 155-186

Cornelius O’Leary, Professor of Political Science, Queen’s University, Belfast, ‘Belfast Urban Government in the Age of Reform’, pp. 187-202

Sybil Gribbon, Lecturer in History, University College of North Wales, Bangor, ‘An Irish City: Belfast 1911’, pp. 203-220

Mary Daly, Lecturer in Modern Irish History, University College Dublin, ‘Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Dublin’, pp. 221-xx

 

Conference 12, Historical Studies XI

Conference:

12th Irish Conference of Historians, Trinity College Dublin, 1975

Proceedings:

  • T.W. Moody (ed.), Nationality and the pursuit of national independence: Historical Studies XI (Belfast, 1978).

 

Conference 11, Historical Studies X

Conference: 

11th Irish Conference of Historians, University College Galway, 1973

Proceedings:

G.A.Hayes-McCoy (ed.), Historical Studies X: papers read before the Eleventh Irish Conference of Historians, held in Galway in May 1973 (Dublin: Irish Committee of Historical Sciences, 1976)

Table of Contents:

Maurice Keen, Balliol College, Oxford, ‘Chivalrous culture in fourteenth-century England’, pp. 1-24

Gearoid MacNiocaill, University College, Galway, ‘Aspects of Irish law in the late thirteenth century’, pp. 25-42

Anthony Malcomson, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, Belfast, ‘The politics of ‘natural right’: the Abercorn family and Strabane borough, 1692-1800’, pp. 43-90

G.A. Hayes-McCoy, University College, Galway, ‘Sir Walter Scott and Ireland’, pp. 91-108

Patrick O’Farrell, University of New South Wales in Sydney, ‘Emigrant attitudes and behaviour as a source for Irish history’, pp. 109-131

Oswald Hauser, University of Aachen, Federal Republic of Germany, ‘The year 1937: the decisive turning-point in British-German relations’, pp. 132-146

Thomas P. O’Neill, University College, Galway, ‘In search of a political path: Irish Republicanism, 1922 to 1927’, pp. 147-171

Donnchadh O Corrain, University College, Cork, ‘A hand-list of publications on early Irish History’, pp. 172-xx

Conference 10, Historical Studies IX

Conference:

10th Irish Conference of Historians, University College Cork, 29-31 May 1971

Proceedings:

J.G.Barry (ed.), Historical Studies IX: papers read before the Irish Conference of Historians, held in Cork on 29-31 May 1971 (Belfast: Blackstaff Press, 1974)

Table of Contents:

Introduction, pp. vii

W.L. Warren, ‘The Historian as ‘Private Eye’’, pp. 1-18

N. Mansergh, ‘The Government of Ireland Act, 1920: its Origins and Purposes. The Working of the ‘Official’ Mind’, pp. 19-48

R.B. McDowell, ‘Ireland in the Eighteenth Century British Empire’, pp. 49-64

Dermot Fenlon, ‘Encore une Question. Lucien Febvre, the Reformation and the School of ‘Annales’’, pp. 65-82

K.F. Roche, ‘Some Stoic Inspiration in the Thought of J.-J. Rousseau, pp. 83-98

Denys Hay, ‘The Church in Italy in the Fifteenth Century’, pp. 99-118

K.B. Nowlan, ‘The Catholic Clergy and Irish Politics in the Eighteen Thirties and Forties’, pp. 119-136

F.J. Byrne, ‘’Senchas’: the Nature of Gaelic Historical Tradition’, pp. 137-160

List of Articles in Historical Studies, volumes I-IX inclusive, pp. 161-xx