Belfast 400 : people, place and history
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Bibliographic Information
Belfast 400 : people, place and history
Liverpool University Press, 2012
- : softback
- : cased
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Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: cased ISBN 9781846316340
Description
Published to mark the four hundredth anniversary of Belfast's charter, Belfast 400 presents a new history of one of the world's most fascinating and most misunderstood cities. The misunderstanding, and the fascination, arise from the same contradictions. Belfast was a significant part of the story of Great Britain's rise to industrial greatness. But it was a city located, not in Great Britain, but in Ireland. It was one of the main theatres in which the conflicts of identity that have created modern Ireland were fought out. Yet both its politics and its industrial character set it wholly apart from other Irish towns. A central part of the history of both societies, it has never fitted neatly into the accepted narrative of either. Against this background Belfast 400 seeks to recapture the true history of Ireland's second city in all its complexity. In doing so it asks many questions. Why did such an apparently unfavourable spot, a waterlogged river mouth, persist for centuries - long before the appearance of the first town - as a site of human settlement. Why did what was intended to be a minor outpost of British settlement in the province of Ulster become its most important urban centre? How did the medium-sized commercial centre that thus emerged expand to become, by the beginning of the twentieth century, one of the world's great centres of shipbuilding and linen manufacture? Finally, and most of all, what did the development of this great industrial centre mean for those who lived there? How did its inhabitants experience the birth pangs of an industrial society, the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century heyday of manufacturing, and the long decline that followed? How far, equally, can the city of Belfast now redefine its identity, and the still often fraught relationships that exist between different sections of its population, to face the challenges of the twenty-first century?
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
List of Tables
Selected Maps
1. Imagining Belfast S.J. Connolly and Gillian McIntosh
2. Beneath Our Feet: The Archaeological Record Ruairi O Baoill
3. The Medieval Settlement Philip Macdonald
4. Making Belfast, 1600-1750 Raymond Gillespie
5. Improving Town, 1750-1820 S.J. Connolly
6. Workshop of the Empire, 1820-1914 Stephen A. Royle
7. Whose City? Belonging and Exclusion in the Nineteenth-Century Urban World S.J. Connolly and Gillian McIntosh
8. An Age of Conservative Modernity, 1914-1968 Sean O'Connell
9. Titanic Town: Living in a Landscape of Conflict Dominic Bryan
Notes
Timeline
Further Reading
Notes on Contributors
Index
Subscribers to the Limited Edition
- Volume
-
: softback ISBN 9781846316357
Description
Published to mark the four hundredth anniversary of Belfast's charter, Belfast 400 presents a new history of one of the world’s most fascinating and most misunderstood cities. The misunderstanding, and the fascination, arise from the same contradictions. Belfast was a significant part of the story of Great Britain’s rise to industrial greatness. But it was a city located, not in Great Britain, but in Ireland. It was one of the main theatres in which the conflicts of identity that have created modern Ireland were fought out. Yet both its politics and its industrial character set it wholly apart from other Irish towns. A central part of the history of both societies, it has never fitted neatly into the accepted narrative of either. Against this background Belfast 400 seeks to recapture the true history of Ireland’s second city in all its complexity. In doing so it asks many questions. Why did such an apparently unfavourable spot, a waterlogged river mouth, persist for centuries – long before the appearance of the first town – as a site of human settlement. Why did what was intended to be a minor outpost of British settlement in the province of Ulster become its most important urban centre? How did the medium-sized commercial centre that thus emerged expand to become, by the beginning of the twentieth century, one of the world’s great centres of shipbuilding and linen manufacture? Finally, and most of all, what did the development of this great industrial centre mean for those who lived there? How did its inhabitants experience the birth pangs of an industrial society, the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century heyday of manufacturing, and the long decline that followed? How far, equally, can the city of Belfast now redefine its identity, and the still often fraught relationships that exist between different sections of its population, to face the challenges of the twenty-first century?
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
List of Tables
Selected Maps
1. Imagining Belfast S.J. Connolly and Gillian McIntosh
2. Beneath Our Feet: The Archaeological Record Ruairi O Baoill
3. The Medieval Settlement Philip Macdonald
4. Making Belfast, 1600-1750 Raymond Gillespie
5. Improving Town, 1750-1820 S.J. Connolly
6. Workshop of the Empire, 1820-1914 Stephen A. Royle
7. Whose City? Belonging and Exclusion in the Nineteenth-Century Urban World S.J. Connolly and Gillian McIntosh
8. An Age of Conservative Modernity, 1914-1968 Sean O’Connell
9. Titanic Town: Living in a Landscape of Conflict Dominic Bryan
Notes
Timeline
Further Reading
Notes on Contributors
Index
Subscribers to the Limited Edition
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