or the political violence precipitating the Irish Civil War of 1922-1923—the subject of his Burns Scholar Lecture on March 2 at 5:30 p.m. in the Burns Library Thompson Room. A collaboration between ...
It was an “unspeakable war,” wrote one journalist, and “a story that nobody dared to tell.” But contrary to popular assumption, the tragic Irish Civil War of 1922-1923—a wrenching, destructive run-up ...
In the century following the Irish Civil War (1922-1923), monuments were erected across the country to honour those who lost their lives and different causes for which they died. There is nothing ...
Together with the lord mayor of Dublin he had attempted, in vain, to bring pro- and anti ... the excesses of the Irish government or the National Army during the civil war, no public condemnation ...
As a teenager, he was an apprentice to the Irish American photographer ... For the first year of the Civil War, O’Sullivan worked with Brady, and then in 1862 became assistant to colleague ...
Michael Collins and Éamon de Valera are two of the most iconic figures in Irish history ... Treaty in 1921 (de Valera) or the pro-Treaty side of the Civil War (Collins). However, Eoghan ...
When the American Civil War ended in April 1865, a group of former northern solders, mostly Irish Americans ... An election was called, and a pro-Confederation party was returned to power ...
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