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Aufstand
Widerstand gegen Fremdherrschaft: vom Amerikanischen Unabhängigkeitskrieg bis zum Irak -
Marsh's Library
a mirror on the world : law, learning and libraries, 1650 - 1750 ; [... papers conference "Marsh's Library: A Mirror on the World" ... took place in Marsh's, [Dublin], from the 18th to the 20th of October 2007] -
Women, writing, and language in early modern Ireland
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The eighteenth-century composite state
representative institutions in Ireland and Europe, 1689 - 1800 -
Ibsen and the Irish Revival
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The experience of revolution in Stuart Britain and Ireland
essays for John Morrill -
Divided kingdom
Ireland, 1630 - 1800 -
The reformation of the landscape
religion, identity, and memory in early modern Britain and Ireland -
Britain, Ireland, and Continental Europe in the eighteenth century
similarities, connections, identities -
Thoughts on a fund for the improvement of credit in Great Britain
and the establishement of a national bank in Ireland -
Letters of an impartial observer
on the affairs of Ireland. Addressed to a gentleman in Dublin -
Thoughts on some late removals in Ireland
in a letter to the Right Honourable the Earl of Kildare. To which is annexed, A list of the Members who voted for and against the rejected money-bill, and the expulsion of the surveyor-general -
An address to the people of Ireland, on the present state of public affairs, and their constitutional rights
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A candid review of the most important occurrences that took place in Ireland
during the last three years: In which is Comprised. I. The Proceedings of the National Convention assembled in Dublin, November 1783, and the succeeding Year. II. Rise and Progress of the Bill for effectuating a Commercial Intercourse between the two Nations, on permanent and equitable Principles. III. His Grace of Portland's Reasons for opposing the Twenty Propositions sent from the Commons to the Lords of England, for their Consideration. IV. Proceedings of the Irish Legislature on the Twenty Propositions transmitted from England. V. Opinion of Mr. Fox's ministerial Character. VI. The probable Consequences of any Proposition in the British Parliament, tending to an Union with the Sister Nation. Vii. The present State of the Press in Ireland considered. In a letter addressed to George Stacpoole, Esq. of Grosvenor Place, London -
Thoughts on national independence
suggested by Mr. Pitt's speeches on the Irish union. Addressed to the People of Great Britain and Ireland. By a member of the honourable society of Lincoln's Inn -
A letter from an Irish gentleman in London to the people of Ireland on the limitation of the regency
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A prayer for the prosperous proceedings and good successe of the Earle of Essex and his companies
in their present expedition in Ireland against Tyrone and his adherents, rebels there. Fit to be vsed of all loyall subiects, as well in that countrie, as in England -
A sermon preached to the Protestants of Ireland, now in London
at the parish-church of St. Clement Dane. October 23, 1712. Being The Day appointed by Act of Parliament in Ireland, for an Anniversary Thanksgiving for the Deliverance of the Protestants of that Kingdom, from the bloody Massacre begun by the Irish Papists, on the 23d of October, 1641. By St. George, Lord Bishop of Clogher