For those who study the history of food, there are at least three reasons which give a better understanding of how the situation in Ireland evolved. Firstly, food in Ireland was different from the beginning of the modern period. Whereas in most of Europe cereals – or rather daily bread – was the staple food, in Ireland this was not the case. Cereals were merely a supplement in the form of gruel or flatbread. Secondly, when eating habits began to change, principally in the 17th century, this was not marked by increased use of cereals, but by the predominant role of the potato, at least for the majority of the population. Finally, and not least, this change in eating habits led to a devastating catastrophe, the Great Famine of 1846-1847. For ...
The activities of Irish medical practitioners in relieving the impact of the Irish Famine (c.1845–52...
In this judicious analysis Professor Cormac O'Grada addresses central questions. Was Ireland overpop...
Scholars have long debated whether there was enough food in Ireland to feed the population during th...
For those who study the history of food, there are at least three reasons which give a better unders...
International audienceFor those who study the history of food, there are at least three reasons whic...
It sounds almost comical to say that a potato altered the course of history. For one country, howeve...
This short paper revisits two questions that were central to Joel Mokyr’s Why Ireland Starved (2nd e...
Before the Great Famine of 1847, the population of Ireland underwent a great demographic rise due to...
Mortality and morbidity of people of Irish descent in Britain is high, including from cardiovascular...
The goal is to understand how potatoes changed the Irish agricultural, political, economic, and soci...
Both jurisdictions of Ireland have high rates of chronic degenerative diseases, particularly of the ...
En vísperas de la Gran Hambruna (1846-50), los ingresos irlandeses eran bajos según los patrones eur...
Food and diet were class markers in 19th-century Ireland, which became evident as nearly 1 million p...
Both jurisdictions of Ireland have high rates of chronic degenerative diseases, particularly of the ...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
The activities of Irish medical practitioners in relieving the impact of the Irish Famine (c.1845–52...
In this judicious analysis Professor Cormac O'Grada addresses central questions. Was Ireland overpop...
Scholars have long debated whether there was enough food in Ireland to feed the population during th...
For those who study the history of food, there are at least three reasons which give a better unders...
International audienceFor those who study the history of food, there are at least three reasons whic...
It sounds almost comical to say that a potato altered the course of history. For one country, howeve...
This short paper revisits two questions that were central to Joel Mokyr’s Why Ireland Starved (2nd e...
Before the Great Famine of 1847, the population of Ireland underwent a great demographic rise due to...
Mortality and morbidity of people of Irish descent in Britain is high, including from cardiovascular...
The goal is to understand how potatoes changed the Irish agricultural, political, economic, and soci...
Both jurisdictions of Ireland have high rates of chronic degenerative diseases, particularly of the ...
En vísperas de la Gran Hambruna (1846-50), los ingresos irlandeses eran bajos según los patrones eur...
Food and diet were class markers in 19th-century Ireland, which became evident as nearly 1 million p...
Both jurisdictions of Ireland have high rates of chronic degenerative diseases, particularly of the ...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
The activities of Irish medical practitioners in relieving the impact of the Irish Famine (c.1845–52...
In this judicious analysis Professor Cormac O'Grada addresses central questions. Was Ireland overpop...
Scholars have long debated whether there was enough food in Ireland to feed the population during th...