Fighting like the devil for the sake of God : Protestants, Catholics and the origins of violence in Victorian Belfast

書誌事項

Fighting like the devil for the sake of God : Protestants, Catholics and the origins of violence in Victorian Belfast

Mark Doyle

Manchester University Press , Distributed in the U.S. exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan , Distributed in Canada exclusively by UBC Press, University of British Columbia, 2009

  • : hardback
  • : pbk

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注記

Bibliography: p. [269]-288

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This fascinating book about Belfast in the middle of the nineteenth century looks at how and why Ireland's most prosperous and industrialized town began to tear itself apart. This study provides a vivid example of how a society can come apart at the seams - and how it can stay that way for generations. Through a series of steadily escalating riots, working-class Protestants and Catholics forged a tradition of violence that profoundly shaped their own identities and that of the city itself, setting the stage for the bitter conflicts of the next century. Fighting like the Devil for the Sake of God describes that foundational moment, offering a new analysis of Belfast's violence that is rooted in the social lives of those who constructed this bitter rivalry and those who were forced to endure it. This book will be of interest to scholars in the fields of Irish and Modern History. -- .

目次

List of maps and illustrations Acknowledgements List of abbreviations Introduction. 1. Defending the faith: evangelicalism and anti-Catholicism 2. Belfast Catholics: 'a mere incohesive heap' 3. An unenviable notoriety: the 1857 riots 4. Local government and Catholic alienation 5. The idea of order: Dublin Castle and Belfast Protestants 6. The city erupts: August 1864 7. Glasgow: sectarian detente 8. Memories of violence, 1864-1886 Epilogue Appendix: 1864 riot ballads Bibliography Index -- .

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