Description

Book Synopsis
Robert Lynch is Research Fellow at the Institute of Irish Studies, Queen's University, Belfast, UK. He is the author of The Northern I.R.A. and the Early Years of Partition (2006).

Trade Review
His pithy text is structured in clear, digestible sections; other helpful features for students and teachers alike are sample essay/exam questions and an appendix of key documents from the period. I consequently include Lynch’s even-handed textbook on my seminar reading list and recommend for others Revolutionary Ireland as a useful gateway to a fascinating, intensively researched, and still controversial decade or more in Irish history. * Breac *
A book of this size and presentation boasts numerous advantages. Lynch successfully liaises utility and scholarship, making Revolutionary Ireland, 1912–25 an essential introduction to the field and an attractive choice for university seminars. Contemporary voices, including accounts from statesmen, soldiers, clergy, and common observers, bolster an already vivid text, while primary source documents allow readers to explore the essential link between historical narrative and the archival material it interprets … Overall, this book is an essential contribution to the work being produced on the revolutionary period. * Journal of British Studies *
Revolutionary Ireland, 1912-25 provides an excellent introduction to this vital period in Irish history for those coming to the subject for the first time, and especially for students who wish to consolidate and extend their knowledge of Irish history. Including sample exam questions, reading lists, web links and a selection of important documents from the period this book explores the political history of the ‘revolutionary period’ and clarifies the sequence of events leading to the 1916 Rising, the War of Independence, the creation of two new partition states, and the Civil War. The political complexities of the period are laid bare and their consequences made clear. This book reveals how both the Northern Irish State and the Irish Free State, created in violence, were defined and shaped by their experiences during the revolutionary period. * Maria Luddy, Professor of History, University of Warwick, UK *
The Irish Revolution, 1912 to 1925, has in the last decades inspired a massive amount of attention from historians. Robert Lynch’s beautifully written short book provides a much needed synthesis of recent literature. It is also the product of extensive work on primary sources and notable for original coverage of the north east. It places the partition of the island in an all-Ireland context in contrast to so many works written from a narrow unionist or nationalist perspective. The book’s structure, its inclusion of select bibliographies and sample essay questions add to its value for students. * Michael Hopkinson, formerly Reader in History, University of Stirling, UK *

Table of Contents
Introduction: What Revolution? 1. Background to the Revolution, 1890-1910 2. The Ulster Crisis, 1912-16 3. The Easter Rising 4. The Rise of Sinn Fein, 1916-18 5. The Irish War of Independence, 1919-21 6. The Establishment of Northern Ireland, 1918-21 7. Truce and Treaty, July-December 1921 8. Partition in Practice, January-July 1922 9. The Irish Civil War, 1922-23 10. Consolidating the Revolution, 1923-1925 Appendix Bibliography Index

Revolutionary Ireland 191225

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    A Paperback by Robert Lynch

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      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
      Publication Date: 1/29/2015 12:01:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781441158383, 978-1441158383
      ISBN10: 1441158383

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Robert Lynch is Research Fellow at the Institute of Irish Studies, Queen's University, Belfast, UK. He is the author of The Northern I.R.A. and the Early Years of Partition (2006).

      Trade Review
      His pithy text is structured in clear, digestible sections; other helpful features for students and teachers alike are sample essay/exam questions and an appendix of key documents from the period. I consequently include Lynch’s even-handed textbook on my seminar reading list and recommend for others Revolutionary Ireland as a useful gateway to a fascinating, intensively researched, and still controversial decade or more in Irish history. * Breac *
      A book of this size and presentation boasts numerous advantages. Lynch successfully liaises utility and scholarship, making Revolutionary Ireland, 1912–25 an essential introduction to the field and an attractive choice for university seminars. Contemporary voices, including accounts from statesmen, soldiers, clergy, and common observers, bolster an already vivid text, while primary source documents allow readers to explore the essential link between historical narrative and the archival material it interprets … Overall, this book is an essential contribution to the work being produced on the revolutionary period. * Journal of British Studies *
      Revolutionary Ireland, 1912-25 provides an excellent introduction to this vital period in Irish history for those coming to the subject for the first time, and especially for students who wish to consolidate and extend their knowledge of Irish history. Including sample exam questions, reading lists, web links and a selection of important documents from the period this book explores the political history of the ‘revolutionary period’ and clarifies the sequence of events leading to the 1916 Rising, the War of Independence, the creation of two new partition states, and the Civil War. The political complexities of the period are laid bare and their consequences made clear. This book reveals how both the Northern Irish State and the Irish Free State, created in violence, were defined and shaped by their experiences during the revolutionary period. * Maria Luddy, Professor of History, University of Warwick, UK *
      The Irish Revolution, 1912 to 1925, has in the last decades inspired a massive amount of attention from historians. Robert Lynch’s beautifully written short book provides a much needed synthesis of recent literature. It is also the product of extensive work on primary sources and notable for original coverage of the north east. It places the partition of the island in an all-Ireland context in contrast to so many works written from a narrow unionist or nationalist perspective. The book’s structure, its inclusion of select bibliographies and sample essay questions add to its value for students. * Michael Hopkinson, formerly Reader in History, University of Stirling, UK *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: What Revolution? 1. Background to the Revolution, 1890-1910 2. The Ulster Crisis, 1912-16 3. The Easter Rising 4. The Rise of Sinn Fein, 1916-18 5. The Irish War of Independence, 1919-21 6. The Establishment of Northern Ireland, 1918-21 7. Truce and Treaty, July-December 1921 8. Partition in Practice, January-July 1922 9. The Irish Civil War, 1922-23 10. Consolidating the Revolution, 1923-1925 Appendix Bibliography Index

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