Northern Ireland
Richard English argues that historians have a practical and constructive role to play in today’s Ulster. |
Few British soldiers have written of their experiences of the Northern Ireland Troubles. Here, former infantry officer Patrick Mercer recalls his tours, which offer lessons for today’s soldiers and politicians. Published in History Today, Volume: 61 Issue: 2
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Richard English argues that historians have a practical and constructive role to play in today’s Ulster. |
Peter R. Neumann shows the relevance of ‘The Troubles’ to allied policy in Iraq. Published in History Today, Volume: 54 Issue: 2
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Andrew Boyd offers a bicentennial analysis of a key element in the culture of Protestant Ulster. |
Rex Cathcart examines how William's brief intervention in Ireland has provided a rallying-point in ideology and iconography for Protestants to the present day. |
Alan Heesom discusses 19th-century politics either side of the Irish Sea. |
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Posted June 22 2011
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A rage for Mesmerism gripped society in London at the end of the eighteenth century, as it had in Paris and Vienna. But it was to be short-lived. The excesses of its devotees soon discredited the 'science' in the eyes of the public and it eventually became a vehicle for unbalanced fringes of society. |
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