It is often said that Ireland is still awaiting its Holdsworth. In fact scholars have been lamenting the lack of a comprehensive legal history of Ireland long before William Searle Holdsworth wrote his monumental, if flawed, History of English Law. Calls for the creation of a comprehensive text on Ireland’s legal past have been heard since at least the 1840s. The nineteenth century historian James Hardiman exhorted future scholars by emphasising the "abundance of recorded materials" awaiting them. (Tracts Relating to Ireland, vol. ii, (Dublin 1843), p.14). Alas, much of this source material was lost forever during the Irish civil war in 1922 with the destruction of most of the legal documents stored in the Public Record Office located a...
The English Isles presents proceedings of a conference held at Trinity College, Dublin, in 2007, ‘t...
Review of Reconciling Ireland: Fifty Years of Anglo-Irish Agreements, by Richard Humphreys (ed.) (Ne...
In his Allegory of Love ([Oxford, 1936], p. 349), C. S. Lewis wrote that Ireland had corrupted Spens...
It is often said that Ireland is still awaiting its Holdsworth. In fact scholars have been lamenting...
On 30 June 1922 Irish legal history went up in smoke. It was wrenched apart and incinerated in a gr...
This volume contains a critical edition of the Old Irish law tract Córus Bésgnai(The Arrangement of ...
There is a slight possibility that this book might not get the recognition that it deserves in its h...
Liam Breatnach’s edition ofthe Old Irish law tex tCórus Bésgnai, a title that can be transl...
This book was produced following a conference held in King\u27s Inns in June 2012 in celebration of ...
Some traces remain of the immigration of individuals from France to Ireland, probably for reasons o...
Contrary to popular belief there is no sovereign state called the 'Republic of Ireland'. The Irish C...
Until the last decade, scholarly work on the history of sport and leisure in Ireland was most noted ...
Emigration has been a significant feature of Irish life and, in more recent years, of Irish academic...
Review of Nicholas Canny, Making Ireland British, 1580-1650 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001
The book under review is a survey of the influence of law on mainland British North America up to ab...
The English Isles presents proceedings of a conference held at Trinity College, Dublin, in 2007, ‘t...
Review of Reconciling Ireland: Fifty Years of Anglo-Irish Agreements, by Richard Humphreys (ed.) (Ne...
In his Allegory of Love ([Oxford, 1936], p. 349), C. S. Lewis wrote that Ireland had corrupted Spens...
It is often said that Ireland is still awaiting its Holdsworth. In fact scholars have been lamenting...
On 30 June 1922 Irish legal history went up in smoke. It was wrenched apart and incinerated in a gr...
This volume contains a critical edition of the Old Irish law tract Córus Bésgnai(The Arrangement of ...
There is a slight possibility that this book might not get the recognition that it deserves in its h...
Liam Breatnach’s edition ofthe Old Irish law tex tCórus Bésgnai, a title that can be transl...
This book was produced following a conference held in King\u27s Inns in June 2012 in celebration of ...
Some traces remain of the immigration of individuals from France to Ireland, probably for reasons o...
Contrary to popular belief there is no sovereign state called the 'Republic of Ireland'. The Irish C...
Until the last decade, scholarly work on the history of sport and leisure in Ireland was most noted ...
Emigration has been a significant feature of Irish life and, in more recent years, of Irish academic...
Review of Nicholas Canny, Making Ireland British, 1580-1650 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001
The book under review is a survey of the influence of law on mainland British North America up to ab...
The English Isles presents proceedings of a conference held at Trinity College, Dublin, in 2007, ‘t...
Review of Reconciling Ireland: Fifty Years of Anglo-Irish Agreements, by Richard Humphreys (ed.) (Ne...
In his Allegory of Love ([Oxford, 1936], p. 349), C. S. Lewis wrote that Ireland had corrupted Spens...