We use cookies to make your experience better. To comply with the new e-Privacy directive, we need to ask for your consent to set the cookies. Learn more.
Books
-
Four Killings : Land Hunger, Murder and A Family in the Irish Revolution€21.99
The story of a single family during the Irish Revolution, Four Killings is a book about political murder, and the powerful hunger for land and the savagery it can unleash.
-
The Partition : Ireland Divided, 1885-1925 by Charles Townshend (Author)Special Price €24.99 Regular Price €29.99
A compelling history of the turbulent journey to Irish independence, published for the centenary of the Partitioning the aftermath of the horrors of the Irish Famine, the grim, distrustful relationship between Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom deteriorated into a generations-long argument about 'Home Rule'.
-
Lost Ireland€22.99
Pavilion Books' Lost series traditionally looks at the cherished places of a city that time, progress and fashion have swept aside.
-
From the Grand Canal to the Dodder€20.00
The Dublin suburbs situated between the Grand Canal and the River Dodder consist of distinct neighbourhoods, each with their own character and style.
-
Clare and the Civil War€20.00
The Irish Civil War was contested as bitterly in Clare as in any other part of Ireland.
-
That Place We Call HomeSpecial Price €20.69 Regular Price €22.99
A journey through the place names of Ireland
-
Leitrim : The Irish Revolution, 1912-1923€24.95
Using a wide variety of sources in Ireland and Britain, Patrick McGarty has produced an absorbing, comprehensive, and insightful exploration of County Leitrim during the Irish Revolution.
-
Crowdfunding the Revolution : The First Dail Loan and the Battle for Irish Independence€20.00
In 1919, the revolutionary Irish government launches an audacious plan to crowdfund the equivalent of 30,000,000 to fund a counter-state in open defiance of British rule in Ireland.
-
Tale of a Great Sham€20.00
The publication in 1986 of Anna Parnell's The Tale of a Great Sham, scrupulously edited and annotated by Dana Hearne, was a landmark event in Irish women's history. For the first time the general reader was able to read an account of the land war written by the woman who at the time had been hailed as the Irish 'Joan of Arc'.
-
Irish Servicewomen in the Great War : From Western Front to the Roaring Twenties€24.99
When the call went out in 1917 for volunteers willing to serve both at home and on the Western Front in a newly founded Women's Army Auxiliary Corps, young women from every province of Ireland responded just as eagerly as those from homes in Scotland, England and Wales.