Year Of Liberty: The Great Irish Rebellion of 1798

Author(s): Pakenham Thomas

History

Secondhand.


The rebellion of 1798 was the most violent and tragic event in Irish history between the Jacobite wars and the Great Famine of the 1840s. Using contemporary accounts and a wide variety of illustrated sources, Thomas Pakenham provides a riveting account of the unfolding drama of that fateful year. He sets the events in the context of war between Britain and France and the wave of revolutions that swept through Europe at that time: a successful revolution in Ireland, it was thought, and Britain would be the next to go. He shows that the rebellion was the result of Pitt's failure to have any policy for Ireland; the misplaced optimism of Wolfe Tone and the 'United Irishmen'; and the tragic illusions of the Irish peasantry, who were quite unprepared for war. The result of the rebellion was no less disastrous: Britain imposed a Union on terms that proved unacceptable to the majority of the Irish people, and there was a legacy of violence and hatred that has persisted to the present day.

General Information

  • : 9780349112527
  • : little
  • : little
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Pakenham Thomas
  • : Trade Paperback
  • : 424
  • : b&w illustrations