On 30 June 1922 Irish legal history went up in smoke. It was wrenched apart and incinerated in a great explosion of munitions. The destruction of the Irish Public Records Office at Dublin’s Four Courts marked the end of the first act in a tragedy of fratricidal folly known as the Irish civil war (1922-1923). One contemporary eyewitness described the remains of the Public Records Office in the moments after the explosion as a ruin "littered with chunks of masonry and smouldering records". The remains of the collection of legal documents that dated as far back as the thirteenth century were reduced to fragments of paper "gyrating in the upper air like seagulls" (Ernie O’Malley, The Singing Flame, Dublin, 1978, pp. 114-5).Copyright stateme...
The Great Parchment Book of the Honourable the Irish Society is a major surviving historical record ...
Michael Kerr’s reconstruction of Northern Ireland’s ‘lost peace process’ reads at times like a polit...
In 1860, the Irish nationalist writer John Mitchell avowed that ‘The Almighty, indeed, sent the pota...
On 30 June 1922 Irish legal history went up in smoke. It was wrenched apart and incinerated in a gr...
It is often said that Ireland is still awaiting its Holdsworth. In fact scholars have been lamenting...
It is often said that Ireland is still awaiting its Holdsworth. In fact scholars have been lamenting...
Irish legal history went up in smoke on 30 June 1922. The explosion of munitions and resulting fire ...
This volume contains a critical edition of the Old Irish law tract Córus Bésgnai(The Arrangement of ...
Liam Breatnach’s edition ofthe Old Irish law tex tCórus Bésgnai, a title that can be transl...
This rich book explores the links between Irish periodical journals of the twentieth century and jou...
peer-reviewedThis book was produced following a conference held in King's Inns in June 2012 in celeb...
Review of 'Marriage Disputes - a fragmentary Old Irish law text' Fergus Kelly (ed.).N
Book reviews by Anthony W. Brick, James H. Levi, A. R. Martin, Arthur C. Gregory, Homer Q. Earl, Wil...
Review of "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vi...
This is a book review of Jiří Přibáň, Legal Symbolism: On Law, Time and European Identity, Ashgate, ...
The Great Parchment Book of the Honourable the Irish Society is a major surviving historical record ...
Michael Kerr’s reconstruction of Northern Ireland’s ‘lost peace process’ reads at times like a polit...
In 1860, the Irish nationalist writer John Mitchell avowed that ‘The Almighty, indeed, sent the pota...
On 30 June 1922 Irish legal history went up in smoke. It was wrenched apart and incinerated in a gr...
It is often said that Ireland is still awaiting its Holdsworth. In fact scholars have been lamenting...
It is often said that Ireland is still awaiting its Holdsworth. In fact scholars have been lamenting...
Irish legal history went up in smoke on 30 June 1922. The explosion of munitions and resulting fire ...
This volume contains a critical edition of the Old Irish law tract Córus Bésgnai(The Arrangement of ...
Liam Breatnach’s edition ofthe Old Irish law tex tCórus Bésgnai, a title that can be transl...
This rich book explores the links between Irish periodical journals of the twentieth century and jou...
peer-reviewedThis book was produced following a conference held in King's Inns in June 2012 in celeb...
Review of 'Marriage Disputes - a fragmentary Old Irish law text' Fergus Kelly (ed.).N
Book reviews by Anthony W. Brick, James H. Levi, A. R. Martin, Arthur C. Gregory, Homer Q. Earl, Wil...
Review of "The Blue Wall of Silence: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in Ireland" by Vi...
This is a book review of Jiří Přibáň, Legal Symbolism: On Law, Time and European Identity, Ashgate, ...
The Great Parchment Book of the Honourable the Irish Society is a major surviving historical record ...
Michael Kerr’s reconstruction of Northern Ireland’s ‘lost peace process’ reads at times like a polit...
In 1860, the Irish nationalist writer John Mitchell avowed that ‘The Almighty, indeed, sent the pota...