On the 6th of May 1882, Lord Frederick Cavendish, the newly arrived Chief Secretary for Ireland, and Thomas Henry Burke, the Under Secretary for Ireland, were murdered by the Invincibles while walking in Phoenix Park, Dublin. In a detailed reflection on this tragic event, this paper explains why it did occur, who were the Invincibles, what was the fate of the murderers and the consequences of their crimes at the time and in Irish history as a whole.Le 6 mai 1882, Lord Frederick Cavendish, le tout nouveau Secrétaire en Chef pour l'Irlande, et Thomas Henry Burke, le Sous-Secrétaire pour l'Irlande, furent assassinés par les Invincibles alors qu'ils déambulaient dans Phoenix Park à Dublin. Au terme du récit détaillé de ce tragique événement, l'...
On 24 April 1916, Irish nationalists proclaimed the Irish Republic in Dublin while Ireland was still...
The events of Bloody Sunday, November 21st 1920, are regarded as having marked a decisive turning-po...
Late nineteenth-century homicides in Ireland had several distinctive characteristics. They took plac...
On the 6th of May 1882, Lord Frederick Cavendish, the newly arrived Chief Secretary for Ireland, and...
International audienceThis paper aims at exploring two tragic days during which political murders we...
International audienceFrom 1880 to 1922, Dublin Castle evolved from the HQs of the two police forces...
In 1869 an assassination attempt was made on Captain Thomas Eyre Lambert, a prominent Galway landown...
In 1881 Edmund Burke 's various writings concerning Ireland were collected and published by Matthew ...
At Maamtrasna, County Galway, five members of the Joyce family were brutally killed in August 1882. ...
In this inaugural Humbert Memorial Lecture, John Cooney, a history graduate of the University of Gla...
hard-line leader of the United Irishmen, who was deported to France. Frank O'Connor's godf...
Based principally on the contemporary dispatches of the Consuls of France in the United Kingdom, thi...
Cette thèse est une étude chronologique de la présence militaire irlandaise en France sous l’Ancien ...
Violence and terrorism - Nationalist/Catholic and Unionist/Protestant - persist in Northern Ireland ...
The Mahon family have resided at Strokestown Park since the latter 17th Century. King Charles II re...
On 24 April 1916, Irish nationalists proclaimed the Irish Republic in Dublin while Ireland was still...
The events of Bloody Sunday, November 21st 1920, are regarded as having marked a decisive turning-po...
Late nineteenth-century homicides in Ireland had several distinctive characteristics. They took plac...
On the 6th of May 1882, Lord Frederick Cavendish, the newly arrived Chief Secretary for Ireland, and...
International audienceThis paper aims at exploring two tragic days during which political murders we...
International audienceFrom 1880 to 1922, Dublin Castle evolved from the HQs of the two police forces...
In 1869 an assassination attempt was made on Captain Thomas Eyre Lambert, a prominent Galway landown...
In 1881 Edmund Burke 's various writings concerning Ireland were collected and published by Matthew ...
At Maamtrasna, County Galway, five members of the Joyce family were brutally killed in August 1882. ...
In this inaugural Humbert Memorial Lecture, John Cooney, a history graduate of the University of Gla...
hard-line leader of the United Irishmen, who was deported to France. Frank O'Connor's godf...
Based principally on the contemporary dispatches of the Consuls of France in the United Kingdom, thi...
Cette thèse est une étude chronologique de la présence militaire irlandaise en France sous l’Ancien ...
Violence and terrorism - Nationalist/Catholic and Unionist/Protestant - persist in Northern Ireland ...
The Mahon family have resided at Strokestown Park since the latter 17th Century. King Charles II re...
On 24 April 1916, Irish nationalists proclaimed the Irish Republic in Dublin while Ireland was still...
The events of Bloody Sunday, November 21st 1920, are regarded as having marked a decisive turning-po...
Late nineteenth-century homicides in Ireland had several distinctive characteristics. They took plac...