ABSTRACT

Edmund Curtis's remarkable survey of Ireland, from its earliest origins to the twentieth century, is a classic introduction to Ireland's fascinating history. Reaching from St Patrick's Mission in 432 to the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1922, this authoritative text explores the formative events of Ireland's past and encompasses the Norman invasion, Gaelic recovery, Cromwell's Settlement, the Act of Union, and the Great Famine.

Lucid and scholarly, this all-embracing account unfolds the events of Ireland's history and the story of its people, through an examination of their political, religious, social, economic and cultural past. Ireland's unique history is revealed here through the 'moving forces, the deciding facts, and the men who mattered'.

Featuring a chronology of key dates in Irish history and a guideline to the pronunciation of Irish names, this celebrated narrative now includes a new introduction by Sean Duffy.

chapter 1|18 pages

FROM THE ORIGINS TO A.D. 800

chapter 2|8 pages

THE NORSE TYRANNY, 800–1014

chapter 4|10 pages

THE NORMAN INVASION, 1166–1172

chapter 6|11 pages

THE EXPANSION OF THE COLONY, 1216–1272

chapter 14|16 pages

THE LATER STUART MONARCHY, 1660–1691

chapter 16|23 pages

HANOVERIAN RULE, 1714–1782

chapter 18|15 pages

FROM THE UNION TO 1848

chapter 19|15 pages

FROM THE FAMINE TO PARNELL, 1848–1891

chapter 20|21 pages

FROM PARNELL TO THE TREATY OF 1922