It has suited both sides of Ireland's religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine that affected Ireland in the late 1840s as primarily affecting the Catholic population. However, while the geographies of the Famine have been explored in detail in recent years its religious dimensions have been largely ignored, albeit with a few exceptions. As a consequence, the assumption that the Great Famine was a Catholic famine has not been sufficiently challenged. Drawing on a relatively untapped source, the 1834 Commission on ‘the state of religion and other instruction in Ireland,’ as well as census data, this paper explores the relationship between religion, poverty and population loss over the Famine period. It shows that Catholics w...
Cannibalism is one of our darkest secrets and taboos. It is the ultimate measure of the resilience o...
Responsibility for the tremendous excess mortality associated with the Great Irish Famine of 1846-51...
The Great Famine of Ireland from 1845-51 ranks as one of the most lethal of all time, claiming appro...
It has suited both sides of Ireland’s religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
AbstractIt has suited both sides of Ireland's religious and political divide to portray the Great Fa...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
This data collection contains data primarily from both the 1841 and 1851 Census of Ireland used in F...
The link between demographic pressure and economic conditions in pre-Famine Ireland has long interes...
This overview of the Great Irish Famine is unfolded in terms of the three major phases of British go...
The Great Irish Famine claimed the lives of one million people, mainly from the lower classes. More ...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
In this judicious analysis Professor Cormac O'Grada addresses central questions. Was Ireland overpop...
The Irish famine of the 1840s had a dramatic effect both on the population within Ireland and the po...
During the Great Famine (1845-51) hundreds of thousands of Irish refugees fled to Britain, escaping ...
The Irish Famine killed over a million people who would not have died otherwise. The nosologies publ...
Cannibalism is one of our darkest secrets and taboos. It is the ultimate measure of the resilience o...
Responsibility for the tremendous excess mortality associated with the Great Irish Famine of 1846-51...
The Great Famine of Ireland from 1845-51 ranks as one of the most lethal of all time, claiming appro...
It has suited both sides of Ireland’s religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
AbstractIt has suited both sides of Ireland's religious and political divide to portray the Great Fa...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
This data collection contains data primarily from both the 1841 and 1851 Census of Ireland used in F...
The link between demographic pressure and economic conditions in pre-Famine Ireland has long interes...
This overview of the Great Irish Famine is unfolded in terms of the three major phases of British go...
The Great Irish Famine claimed the lives of one million people, mainly from the lower classes. More ...
International audienceBetween 1800 and 1900, Ireland underwent changes that very few countries have ...
In this judicious analysis Professor Cormac O'Grada addresses central questions. Was Ireland overpop...
The Irish famine of the 1840s had a dramatic effect both on the population within Ireland and the po...
During the Great Famine (1845-51) hundreds of thousands of Irish refugees fled to Britain, escaping ...
The Irish Famine killed over a million people who would not have died otherwise. The nosologies publ...
Cannibalism is one of our darkest secrets and taboos. It is the ultimate measure of the resilience o...
Responsibility for the tremendous excess mortality associated with the Great Irish Famine of 1846-51...
The Great Famine of Ireland from 1845-51 ranks as one of the most lethal of all time, claiming appro...