Navigation

The Great Famine

Availability: Out of Stock
ISBN: 9781526736635
Pub Date06/09/2018
BindingPaperback
Pages192
CountryGBR
Dewey941.5081
SeriesIrish Perspectives
Quick overview Bridging the gap to bring Irish history to the British market, across a range of titles that are so deeply connected to British history as a whole.
€14.72

The Irish potato famine of the 1840s-the 'Great Famine' or 'An gorta mor'-is one of the defining events in modern Irish history. Over a five-year period a population of 8.2 million was reduced to 6.5 million through starvation, disease and emigration. The famine permanently changed one of the constituent parts of the United Kingdom as it then stood and its legacies of depopulation, socio-economic and cultural change, political resentment, and the expansion through mass emigration of an Irish 'diaspora' in Britain, North America and the British Empire still have a resonance today.

Now, in the first installment of a new collaboration between Pen and Sword and History Ireland magazine, some of the world's leading experts on the Great Famine explore the crisis from a range of perspectives. From the importance of the potato in Irish history, to food exports, political change, the provision of charity, the impact of disease, the role of the authorities, the experience of emigration and the changing interpretation of the famine, this volume explores how this seminal event in Irish, British and world history still has a relevance to the globalised world of the twenty-first century.

*
*
*
Product description

The Irish potato famine of the 1840s-the 'Great Famine' or 'An gorta mor'-is one of the defining events in modern Irish history. Over a five-year period a population of 8.2 million was reduced to 6.5 million through starvation, disease and emigration. The famine permanently changed one of the constituent parts of the United Kingdom as it then stood and its legacies of depopulation, socio-economic and cultural change, political resentment, and the expansion through mass emigration of an Irish 'diaspora' in Britain, North America and the British Empire still have a resonance today.

Now, in the first installment of a new collaboration between Pen and Sword and History Ireland magazine, some of the world's leading experts on the Great Famine explore the crisis from a range of perspectives. From the importance of the potato in Irish history, to food exports, political change, the provision of charity, the impact of disease, the role of the authorities, the experience of emigration and the changing interpretation of the famine, this volume explores how this seminal event in Irish, British and world history still has a relevance to the globalised world of the twenty-first century.

Customers who bought this item also bought

Secrets That Created Wishes

Clancy, Siobhan
9781912328888
€11.47

Rewilding: Real Life Stories of Returning British and Irish Wildlife to Balance

Woodfall, David
9780008300470
A hopeful yet practical collection of essays exploring the many opportunities and benefits of rewilding and how to get involved today. Highly illustrated with nature photography tracing landscape change over thousands of years.
€20.51

Very Hungry Caterpillar Board Book

Carle, Eric
9780241003008
Suitable for children, this title covers colourful collage illustrations and its deceptively simply, hopeful story. It features die-cut pages and finger-sized holes to explore.
€7.92