This article assesses ‘Rotten Protestants’, or Protestant home rulers in Ulster, by means of an analysis of the Ulster Liberal Association, from its founding in 1906 until its virtual disappearance by 1918. It argues that Ulster Liberalism has been neglected or dismissed in Irish historiography, and that this predominantly Protestant, pro-home rule organization, with its origins in nineteenth-century radicalism, complicates our understanding of the era. It has previously been argued that this tradition did not really exist: this article uses prosopography to demonstrate the existence of a significant group of Protestant Liberal activists in Ulster, as well as to uncover their social, denominational, and geographic profile. Ulster Liberals e...
In 1912, the British government introduced a Home Rule Bill to Parliament, proposing that Ireland be...
Prime minister H.H. Asquith’s flawed handling of the third Home Rule Bill, the apparent exhaustion o...
The common assertion that the Protestant working class in Northern Ireland is passive, even reaction...
This article assesses ‘Rotten Protestants’, or Protestant home rulers in Ulster, by means of an anal...
This thesis explores the role played by the Church of Ireland, the largest Protestant Church in Irel...
This article investigates the “Rotten Prods” (Protestants) through an archival and historiographical...
This article considers intra-unionist divisions in inter-war Northern Ireland, with an emphasis on t...
Broadly speaking, this is a study of the Protestant population of County Cavan in a time of social ...
This thesis traces the economic, social, political and cultural aspects of the Protestant community...
This thesis examines the development of liberal Protestantism in Waterford between 1800 and 1842. W...
This chapter examines the under-explored contribution of the Irish branch of the Liberal Unionist pa...
The present scholarly focus on Unionist-nationalism has obscured crucial features of late nineteenth...
Histories of Irish partition and discussions of the Irish border portray the six-county settlement a...
In 1912, the British government introduced a Home Rule Bill to Parliament, proposing that Ireland be...
216 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1987.The study examines a compaign...
In 1912, the British government introduced a Home Rule Bill to Parliament, proposing that Ireland be...
Prime minister H.H. Asquith’s flawed handling of the third Home Rule Bill, the apparent exhaustion o...
The common assertion that the Protestant working class in Northern Ireland is passive, even reaction...
This article assesses ‘Rotten Protestants’, or Protestant home rulers in Ulster, by means of an anal...
This thesis explores the role played by the Church of Ireland, the largest Protestant Church in Irel...
This article investigates the “Rotten Prods” (Protestants) through an archival and historiographical...
This article considers intra-unionist divisions in inter-war Northern Ireland, with an emphasis on t...
Broadly speaking, this is a study of the Protestant population of County Cavan in a time of social ...
This thesis traces the economic, social, political and cultural aspects of the Protestant community...
This thesis examines the development of liberal Protestantism in Waterford between 1800 and 1842. W...
This chapter examines the under-explored contribution of the Irish branch of the Liberal Unionist pa...
The present scholarly focus on Unionist-nationalism has obscured crucial features of late nineteenth...
Histories of Irish partition and discussions of the Irish border portray the six-county settlement a...
In 1912, the British government introduced a Home Rule Bill to Parliament, proposing that Ireland be...
216 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1987.The study examines a compaign...
In 1912, the British government introduced a Home Rule Bill to Parliament, proposing that Ireland be...
Prime minister H.H. Asquith’s flawed handling of the third Home Rule Bill, the apparent exhaustion o...
The common assertion that the Protestant working class in Northern Ireland is passive, even reaction...