John MacBride

John MacBride
Author: Donal Fallon
Publisher: The O'Brien Press
Total Pages: 193
Release: 2015-10-12
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1847178049

Major John MacBride, who was Born in Westport, County Mayo in 1868, was a household name in Ireland when many of the leaders of the Easter Rising were still relatively unknown figures. As part of the 'Irish Brigade', a band of nationalists fighting against the British in the Second Boer War, MacBride's name featured in stories in the Freeman's Journal and Arthur Griffith's United Irishman. The Major went on to travel across the United States, lecturing audiences on the blow struck against the British Empire in South Africa. His marriage to Maud Gonne, described as 'Ireland's Joan of Arc', led to further notoriety. Their subsequent bitter separation involved some of the most senior figures in Irish nationalism. MacBride was dismissed by William Butler Yeats as a 'drunken, vainglorious lout; Donal Fallon attempts to unravel the complexities of the man and his life and what led him to fight in Jacob's factory in 1916. John MacBride was executed in Kilmainham Gaol on 5 May 1916, two days before his forty-eighth birthday.

MacBride's Brigade

MacBride's Brigade
Author: Donal P. McCracken
Publisher:
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1999
Genre: History
ISBN:

This is the story of 500 Irish-American men and Irish men who fought the British in the Anglo-Boer war.

Assembly

Assembly
Author: West Point Association of Graduates (Organization).
Publisher:
Total Pages: 600
Release: 1991
Genre:
ISBN:

U.S. Relations With South Africa

U.S. Relations With South Africa
Author: Y. G-m. Lulat
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 522
Release: 2019-05-30
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 100001066X

Relations between the United States and South Africa - or the parts of the world these nations now occupy - go nearly as far back as the very beginning of their inception as permanent European colonial intrusions. This book is a critical overview of these relations from the late seventeenth century to the present. Unprecedented in its scope - and s

Bulletin

Bulletin
Author: Enoch Pratt Free Library of Baltimore City
Publisher:
Total Pages: 434
Release: 1909
Genre: Libraries
ISBN:

The Counterinsurgent Imagination

The Counterinsurgent Imagination
Author: Joseph MacKay
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2023-01-05
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1009225790

Counterinsurgency, the violent suppression of armed insurrection, is among the dominant kinds of war in contemporary world politics. Often linked to protecting populations and reconstructing legitimate political orders, it has appeared in other times and places in very different forms – and has taken on a range of politics in doing so. How did it arrive at its present form, and what generated these others, along the way? Spanning several centuries and four detailed case studies, The Counterinsurgent Imagination unpacks and explores this intellectual history through counterinsurgency manuals. These military theoretical and instructional texts, and the practitioners who produced them, made counterinsurgency possible in practice. By interrogating these processes, this book explains how counter-insurrectionary war eventually took on its late twentieth and early twenty-first century forms. It shows how and why counterinsurgent ideas persist, despite recurring failures.

Those of Us Who Must Die

Those of Us Who Must Die
Author: Derek Molyneux
Publisher: Gill & Macmillan Ltd
Total Pages: 377
Release: 2017-11-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 1788410343

The 1916 Rising is one of the most documented and analysed episodes in Ireland's turbulent history. Often overlooked, however, is its immediate aftermath. This significant window in the narrative of Irish revolutionary history, which saw the rebirth of the Volunteers and laid the foundations for the War of Independence, is usually covered as a footnote, or from the biographical standpoints of the leaders. Picking up where the authors' acclaimed account of the Rising, When the Clock Struck in 1916, left off, we join the men and women of the Rising in the dark abyss of defeat. The leaders' poignant final hours and violent ends are laid bare, but the perspective of those with the unpalatable task of carrying out the executions is also revealed, rectifying a historic disservice to those who reluctantly formed the firing squads. While the prisoners in Dublin awaited their grisly fates, others were deported in stinking cattle boats to camps in England and Wales. When they returned, it was to a jubilant welcome in a radically changed country. The gruesome death of Thomas Ashe in September 1917, after being force-fed in Mountjoy Prison, became a marshalling point for the republican movement, as his funeral saw Volunteers once again assembled in uniform on Dublin's streets. The next phase of the struggle was born, under new leaders who had 'graduated' from the internment camps known as 'Republican Universities', ready and eager to fill the void left by the executed visionaries. The authors sifted through thousands of first-hand accounts of the suffering endured when ordinary people set out to change history. Their stirring account will transport readers into life as it looked, sounded and even smelt to those taking part in this crucial juncture of our history.