This overview of the Great Irish Famine is unfolded in terms of the three major phases of British government policy. The understanding of poverty underlying the paper is in terms of diet, not income per capita, housing or literacy, or any of the other more conventional measures in use by historians of the Famine. The claim is that reliance on a diet consisting almost exclusively of the cheapest foodstuff (potatoes) is both the definition of and the principal measure of poverty in pre-Famine Irish society. There is some emphasis on class conflict, both in its overt and its latent forms, as a constraint on the redistribution of income and food in the face of a massive crisis. A.K. Sen’s entitlements thesis on the causes of famine is held to h...
The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mór) was one of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of the ninete...
The Great Famine of Ireland from 1845-51 ranks as one of the most lethal of all time, claiming appro...
Seasonal hunger and "partial famines" were common occurrences in nineteenth-century Ireland, but the...
In this judicious analysis Professor Cormac O'Grada addresses central questions. Was Ireland overpop...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
The link between demographic pressure and economic conditions in pre-Famine Ireland has long interes...
honors thesisThis paper will analyze the circumstances and ideologies that informed the British gove...
Many people throughout the past 150 years have written about the food crisis in Ireland and how horr...
My Independent Study project is about The Great Irish Potato Famine and how it was a natural disaste...
During the Great Famine (1845-51) hundreds of thousands of Irish refugees fled to Britain, escaping ...
In 1845, on the eve of the Great Irish Famine, the cottier class numbered some three million people....
The Irish Famine was the worst famine in the Irish history. It precluded deaths of over one million ...
One of the most shocking aspects of Irish Famine was the fact that while over a million people died ...
It has suited both sides of Ireland’s religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
The activities of Irish medical practitioners in relieving the impact of the Irish Famine (c.1845–52...
The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mór) was one of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of the ninete...
The Great Famine of Ireland from 1845-51 ranks as one of the most lethal of all time, claiming appro...
Seasonal hunger and "partial famines" were common occurrences in nineteenth-century Ireland, but the...
In this judicious analysis Professor Cormac O'Grada addresses central questions. Was Ireland overpop...
The Great Famine was the single greatest tragedy in Irish history. One million people died of starva...
The link between demographic pressure and economic conditions in pre-Famine Ireland has long interes...
honors thesisThis paper will analyze the circumstances and ideologies that informed the British gove...
Many people throughout the past 150 years have written about the food crisis in Ireland and how horr...
My Independent Study project is about The Great Irish Potato Famine and how it was a natural disaste...
During the Great Famine (1845-51) hundreds of thousands of Irish refugees fled to Britain, escaping ...
In 1845, on the eve of the Great Irish Famine, the cottier class numbered some three million people....
The Irish Famine was the worst famine in the Irish history. It precluded deaths of over one million ...
One of the most shocking aspects of Irish Famine was the fact that while over a million people died ...
It has suited both sides of Ireland’s religious and political divide to portray the Great Famine tha...
The activities of Irish medical practitioners in relieving the impact of the Irish Famine (c.1845–52...
The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mór) was one of the most devastating humanitarian disasters of the ninete...
The Great Famine of Ireland from 1845-51 ranks as one of the most lethal of all time, claiming appro...
Seasonal hunger and "partial famines" were common occurrences in nineteenth-century Ireland, but the...