British Opinion and Irish Self-government, 1865-1925: From Unionism to Liberal CommonwealthIrish Academic Press, 2001 - 316 The movement in British pubic opinion towards the acceptance of Irish self-government in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries has not been systematically investigated by historians. The result is that British acceptance of political independence in Ireland has been regarded as the result of a combination of self-interested machinations by politicians and a weak and distracted response to political violence. This book posits a different explanation, which emphasises the influence of international developments on the ideological context of British attitudes to Ireland in these years. |
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... legislation enacted by British governments in the 1880s against the Irish Land and National Leagues was an immense social evil . Crompton warned the British working class that the Irish question materially affected themselves and their ...
... legislation enacted by British governments in the 1880s against the Irish Land and National Leagues was an immense social evil . Crompton warned the British working class that the Irish question materially affected themselves and their ...
Strona 55
... legislative yield , that of the Edwardian period . Hobson argued that with the Liberal party's legislation of 1906-9 , a ' new conception ' of liberalism based on a ' fuller appreciation and realisation of individual liberty ' and ...
... legislative yield , that of the Edwardian period . Hobson argued that with the Liberal party's legislation of 1906-9 , a ' new conception ' of liberalism based on a ' fuller appreciation and realisation of individual liberty ' and ...
Strona 168
... legislation were therefore correct , ' we should now have to conclude that a scheme of Imperial federation was bound to lead to such friction that it would collapse and have forthwith to be abandoned ' . However , Imperialists had a ...
... legislation were therefore correct , ' we should now have to conclude that a scheme of Imperial federation was bound to lead to such friction that it would collapse and have forthwith to be abandoned ' . However , Imperialists had a ...
Spis treści
The Business of the Theorist | 15 |
Practical Politics | 33 |
Ireland in New Liberal Theory | 53 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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Amery Anglo-Irish relations Anglo-Irish Treaty argued Beesly believed Britain British Empire British politics Bryce C.P. Scott Cambridge Catholic Childers commonwealth Comte Comte's Congreve CPSP crisis dominion Dublin economic Edwardian England English especially Essays federation Garvin Gilbert Murray Gladstone Gladstone's government of Ireland Grigg Guardian Hammond Harrison Hewins Hist historian Hobhouse Hobson Home Rule Bill HWNP idea ideology imperial Imperialists Irish home rule Irish nationalism Irish nationalist Irish politics Irish question Irish self-government J.L. Garvin John July June Kerr Labour Lecky Liberal party Lionel Curtis Lloyd George London Lord Massingham Milner Morley movement Murray nationalist Ireland Nevinson Northern Ireland Observer Oliver Oxford papers Parliament Peatling Philip Kerr Plunkett policy in Ireland politicians Positivism Positivists Protestant radical Round Table Sept settlement Sinn Féin social South Africa Swinny tariff reform Treaty Ulster Unionism Ulster Unionists Unionist party Unionist Ulster United Kingdom unity WASHP
Odniesienia do tej książki
Controversial Issues in Anglo-Irish Relations, 1910-1921 Cornelius O'Leary,Patrick Maume Widok fragmentu - 2004 |
The Eternal Paddy: Irish Identity and the British Press, 1798–1882 Michael de Nie Ograniczony podgląd - 2004 |