The institution of kingship was a fundamental feature of medieval Irish society; if we can better understand kingship, we can similarly gain a greater appreciation of the distinctive features of that society. This thesis investigates the practices of Irish kings and dynasties in the Central Middle Ages (roughly, the ninth to twelfth centuries) as represented by the sources. Several kingdoms and dynasties of medieval Ireland are closely studied with reference to different aspects of royal practice. There are two particular elements of this methodology. The first is to trace the practices employed by the kings of those dynasties over time; this gives us a greater sense of how kingship changed through the centuries, and enables us to move awa...
The fall of the Kildare Geraldines in 1534 has traditionally been seen as the hinge of late medieval...
This is not a piece of original research. It is merely an attempt to see what an anthropologist, usi...
This paper examines two issues: misconceptions concerning English law in high medieval Ireland; and ...
This thesis explores the evolution of kingship in early medieval Ireland (AD 400–1150) through a kin...
This thesis is a comparative analysis of sacral kingship in early medieval Ireland and England from ...
This paper considers the process of the formation of ‘nation’ consciousnesses in Medieval Ireland. I...
This study sets out to examine Dublin between 980 and 1054; more particularly it assesses the role o...
THESIS 4482.1THESIS 4482.2This work presents the results of a detailed investigation into the ceremo...
With the introduction of Christianity, kings were quick to use their patronage of the Church to infl...
Despite the political disunity of early Irish society, theories and expressions of national identity...
The purpose of this dissertation is to analyse the roles and representations of Irish queens in earl...
This thesis examines the céli Dé, individual ecclesiastics who constituted the intellectual and spir...
During the later medieval period in Ireland, Gaelic lords continued to publicly identify themselves ...
The Ó Cellaig lordship of Uí Maine was a substantial political territory and influential cultural po...
This is a thesis of two parts, concerning aspects of the political structure of two kingdoms: Irelan...
The fall of the Kildare Geraldines in 1534 has traditionally been seen as the hinge of late medieval...
This is not a piece of original research. It is merely an attempt to see what an anthropologist, usi...
This paper examines two issues: misconceptions concerning English law in high medieval Ireland; and ...
This thesis explores the evolution of kingship in early medieval Ireland (AD 400–1150) through a kin...
This thesis is a comparative analysis of sacral kingship in early medieval Ireland and England from ...
This paper considers the process of the formation of ‘nation’ consciousnesses in Medieval Ireland. I...
This study sets out to examine Dublin between 980 and 1054; more particularly it assesses the role o...
THESIS 4482.1THESIS 4482.2This work presents the results of a detailed investigation into the ceremo...
With the introduction of Christianity, kings were quick to use their patronage of the Church to infl...
Despite the political disunity of early Irish society, theories and expressions of national identity...
The purpose of this dissertation is to analyse the roles and representations of Irish queens in earl...
This thesis examines the céli Dé, individual ecclesiastics who constituted the intellectual and spir...
During the later medieval period in Ireland, Gaelic lords continued to publicly identify themselves ...
The Ó Cellaig lordship of Uí Maine was a substantial political territory and influential cultural po...
This is a thesis of two parts, concerning aspects of the political structure of two kingdoms: Irelan...
The fall of the Kildare Geraldines in 1534 has traditionally been seen as the hinge of late medieval...
This is not a piece of original research. It is merely an attempt to see what an anthropologist, usi...
This paper examines two issues: misconceptions concerning English law in high medieval Ireland; and ...