For the Irish who chose to emigrate during the Great Famine (1845-1851), Canada was a refuge that welcomed as much as 45% of the total Irish emigration in 1847. The following paper intends to study the Canadian press in order to show how Canadians reacted to the first significant potato crop losses in Ireland after the autumn of 1846 and how they responded to the mass arrivals of famine-stricken Irish poor in 1847. This study of the Canadian press will be used to assess the level of solidarity that existed at the time within the British Empire
Cet article examine la Grande Famine irlandaise (1845-1851) dans une perspective écossaise. L’Ecosse...
This thesis explores the ways in which the Irish-Catholic population of Canada was perceived and de...
Ireland on the eve of the Great Famine was a poor and backward economy. The Great Irish Famine of th...
Pour les Irlandais qui firent le choix d’émigrer pendant la Grande Famine (1845-1851), le Canada fut...
International audienceFor the Irish who chose to emigrate during the Great Famine (1845-1851), Canad...
In 1847, 215,000 Irish fled their famine-stricken and diseased homeland, and of this number, some 90...
Throughout the nineteenth century, Canada regularly received Irish immigrants who became a tolerated...
This paper looks at how the politically orthodox Journal des Débats politiques et littéraires, close...
This article reviews the historical debate on the colonial causation and dimensions of the Great Iri...
Since the early 1990s the study of the Great Famine of 1845-52 has been subject to a critical and cr...
Irish emigration was a reality well before the Great Famine, but it changed significantly after 1845...
The present study proposes a detailed examination of the Irish migration to Montreal between 1847 an...
This research paper identified and examined the political and policy responses of the British govern...
Many people throughout the past 150 years have written about the food crisis in Ireland and how horr...
The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mór) was one of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of the ninete...
Cet article examine la Grande Famine irlandaise (1845-1851) dans une perspective écossaise. L’Ecosse...
This thesis explores the ways in which the Irish-Catholic population of Canada was perceived and de...
Ireland on the eve of the Great Famine was a poor and backward economy. The Great Irish Famine of th...
Pour les Irlandais qui firent le choix d’émigrer pendant la Grande Famine (1845-1851), le Canada fut...
International audienceFor the Irish who chose to emigrate during the Great Famine (1845-1851), Canad...
In 1847, 215,000 Irish fled their famine-stricken and diseased homeland, and of this number, some 90...
Throughout the nineteenth century, Canada regularly received Irish immigrants who became a tolerated...
This paper looks at how the politically orthodox Journal des Débats politiques et littéraires, close...
This article reviews the historical debate on the colonial causation and dimensions of the Great Iri...
Since the early 1990s the study of the Great Famine of 1845-52 has been subject to a critical and cr...
Irish emigration was a reality well before the Great Famine, but it changed significantly after 1845...
The present study proposes a detailed examination of the Irish migration to Montreal between 1847 an...
This research paper identified and examined the political and policy responses of the British govern...
Many people throughout the past 150 years have written about the food crisis in Ireland and how horr...
The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mór) was one of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of the ninete...
Cet article examine la Grande Famine irlandaise (1845-1851) dans une perspective écossaise. L’Ecosse...
This thesis explores the ways in which the Irish-Catholic population of Canada was perceived and de...
Ireland on the eve of the Great Famine was a poor and backward economy. The Great Irish Famine of th...