This single-authored article draws upon Irish and Spanish primary sources to show how first and second generation Irish women migrants, succeeded in assimilating in Spanish society in the mid-eighteenth century. The advancement of schools and hospitals is examined, alongside the women’s development of networks of power and influence. It examines women in the key towns of Madrid, Barcelona, Valladolid, Burgos, Santiago, Ferrol, Pontevedra, Seville and Cadiz. The study is a revised and extended version of an invited conference paper given at the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance conference on ‘Borders and Frontiers in the Medieval and Early Modern World’ held in Las Vegas, Nevada, in 2002
This thesis examines the public and private lives of elite women in Ireland at the close of the seve...
Ciaran O’Scea holds a doctorate from the European University Institute in Florence, and curated the ...
This article explores how communities of female religious within the English sphere of influence in ...
This single-authored article draws upon Irish and Spanish primary sources to show how first and seco...
This chapter utilises a wealth of Irish archival records to present an overview of Irish female crim...
This article is a synthesis that compare rural and urban female cultural levels in the 18th century ...
Although women were a critical component of transatlantic migration, we know little about women’s de...
Irish catholic women religious who migrated to Spain in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries esta...
First wave Irish migrants who settled permanently in Spain received a positive reception and gained ...
This work examines the lives and wellbeing of Irish women in the United States from 1850 until 1914,...
Over the last decade scientific literature has shown a growing interest in gender and migration stud...
The late seventeenth and early eighteenth century was a period of great social and political change ...
First wave Irish migrants who established communities in Spain founded initial permanent settlements...
The apparently simple decision of travelling taken by a woman provides important information about g...
This article examines the lives of Irish-born women religious around the world in the period 1840–19...
This thesis examines the public and private lives of elite women in Ireland at the close of the seve...
Ciaran O’Scea holds a doctorate from the European University Institute in Florence, and curated the ...
This article explores how communities of female religious within the English sphere of influence in ...
This single-authored article draws upon Irish and Spanish primary sources to show how first and seco...
This chapter utilises a wealth of Irish archival records to present an overview of Irish female crim...
This article is a synthesis that compare rural and urban female cultural levels in the 18th century ...
Although women were a critical component of transatlantic migration, we know little about women’s de...
Irish catholic women religious who migrated to Spain in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries esta...
First wave Irish migrants who settled permanently in Spain received a positive reception and gained ...
This work examines the lives and wellbeing of Irish women in the United States from 1850 until 1914,...
Over the last decade scientific literature has shown a growing interest in gender and migration stud...
The late seventeenth and early eighteenth century was a period of great social and political change ...
First wave Irish migrants who established communities in Spain founded initial permanent settlements...
The apparently simple decision of travelling taken by a woman provides important information about g...
This article examines the lives of Irish-born women religious around the world in the period 1840–19...
This thesis examines the public and private lives of elite women in Ireland at the close of the seve...
Ciaran O’Scea holds a doctorate from the European University Institute in Florence, and curated the ...
This article explores how communities of female religious within the English sphere of influence in ...