After discussing some of the most important facts and figures pertaining to An Gorta Mór (the Great Irish Famine of 1845-1852), this article turns to some of the images of monuments, crosses, stones and sculptures erected in commemoration of those who succumbed during the period. Alongside the images are travelers\u27 statements, many of which were captured by the author while journeying to \u27dark pilgrimage\u27 sites in Ireland, Canada and the United States
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
The historiography of the Great Famine in Ireland has largely been concerned with the role played by...
Item does not contain fulltextThe 150th anniversary of Ireland’s Great Famine in the 1990s generated...
The National Famine Way is a trail along Ireland’s Royal Canal that traces the remarkable trek of th...
This article discusses two North American famine monuments in the context of studies by Pierre Nora ...
This article provides an interim report, and gazetteer, on the enumeration and categorisation of mem...
The Irish Famine is a defining moment in Ireland’s history. Surprisingly mass commemoration did not ...
This research has two main components: first, an exploration of how communities react to socio-natur...
In September 2006 I began a semester at Concordia University as Peter O’Brien Visiting Scholar, than...
The potato blight that struck Ireland in 1845 led to ineffable suffering that sent shockwaves throug...
This article revisits the memory of the Finland’s 1860s famine (“Great Hunger Years”) at its sesquic...
This collection of essays is based upon the contributions to the annual Great Famine Commemoration o...
It has suited both sides of Ireland's religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
It has suited both sides of Ireland’s religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
The historiography of the Great Famine in Ireland has largely been concerned with the role played by...
Item does not contain fulltextThe 150th anniversary of Ireland’s Great Famine in the 1990s generated...
The National Famine Way is a trail along Ireland’s Royal Canal that traces the remarkable trek of th...
This article discusses two North American famine monuments in the context of studies by Pierre Nora ...
This article provides an interim report, and gazetteer, on the enumeration and categorisation of mem...
The Irish Famine is a defining moment in Ireland’s history. Surprisingly mass commemoration did not ...
This research has two main components: first, an exploration of how communities react to socio-natur...
In September 2006 I began a semester at Concordia University as Peter O’Brien Visiting Scholar, than...
The potato blight that struck Ireland in 1845 led to ineffable suffering that sent shockwaves throug...
This article revisits the memory of the Finland’s 1860s famine (“Great Hunger Years”) at its sesquic...
This collection of essays is based upon the contributions to the annual Great Famine Commemoration o...
It has suited both sides of Ireland's religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
It has suited both sides of Ireland’s religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
The historiography of the Great Famine in Ireland has largely been concerned with the role played by...
Item does not contain fulltextThe 150th anniversary of Ireland’s Great Famine in the 1990s generated...