The Great Famine: Ireland's Agony 1845-1852

Author(s): Ciaran O Murchadha

History

The Great Famine: Ireland's Agony examines this enormous human calamity anew. Beginning with the coming of the potato blight in 1845 and the resulting harvest failures that left the country's impoverished population numb with shock as well as foodless, it explores government relief measures that so often failed to meet the needs of the poor, leading in fact to many more deaths.The book charts the horrific realities of Ireland's pauper-crammed workhouses, the mass clearances of the later Famine period and the great waves of panic-driven emigration that in a few short years combined to empty the country of its once teeming population. Drawing on eyewitness accounts, official reports, newspapers and private diaries, the focus of the book rests on the experiences of those who suffered and died during the Famine, and on those who suffered and survived. This is an important book for anyone who wants to understand Europe's greatest nineteenth century population disaster and its long term consequences.

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A detailed, scholarly account of the famine that took place in Ireland between 1845 and 1852 and its aftermath.

The time is ripe for a fresh, synthetic history of the Great Irish Famine that builds on the many excellent local histories of the famine written in the 1980s and 1990s. Ciaran O Murchadha's lucid and moving account is exactly this: a work of great narrative and analytic power that is accessible, courageous, and ably written. It will be widely read, and deserves to be. -- Professor Cormac O Grada, University College Dublin, Ireland One of the tragedies of the famine is that so many of the dead remain invisible: their deaths were unrecorded and many of the dead were buried without coffin, headstone or traditional burial rites. In actually naming some of the victims of the famine - Dennis McKennedy who was owed over two weeks wages when he died; Jeremiah Hegarty, employed on the public works, who gave his meager supply of food to his grandchildren because they were 'crying with hunger' - O Murchadha gives to the famine dead a dignity and a recognition that has been denied to them for so long. This is a compelling read for both scholars of the Famine and those who are new to the topic. It is beautifully written, rich in detail and interspersed with contemporary images that enhance the text. -- Christine Kinealy, Author Of This Great Calamity: The Irish Famine 1845-52 Ciaran O Murchadha has written an extraordinary book about the Great Famine that is full of fresh and penetrating insights into the causes of the catastrophe, the complex unfolding of the crisis, its profound consequences, and the much-debated question of responsibility. In this sweeping, powerfully evocative, and always probing account, O Murchadha combines his own original research and thinking with an impressive command of the extensive work done by other scholars over the last two decades. His book deserves the widest possible audience. -- James S. Donnelly, Jr. Professor Emeritus Of History, University Of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Building on new research from the last 15 years, O Murchadha has created a fine overview of the famine...Dr O Murchadha's book is a welcome addition to famine historiography and it demonstrates that there is still much that remains to be told about this catastrophe. BBC History Magazine O Murchadha paints a vivid portrait in words of the grim few years, supplemented by some equally harrowing pictures integrated with the text...Anybody wanting to understand some of the historical underlying resentment of the smaller nation towards the larger over the last two centuries could hardly do better than to start with this book. thebookbag.co.uk [H]ighly readable...the author makes good use of the works of many travel writers who left us vivid descriptions of the poverty of ordinary Irish people. The Times Higher Education Supplement Ciaran O Murchadha has for many years been publishing original and valuable accounts of the Great Famine in Clare... He has now produced a wider study, which in addition to presenting the fruits of his own extensive research also incorporates and sunthesises the work of other scholars on this subject in recent years. The result is a most impressive and extremely valuable contribution to the historiography of this tragic era in Irish history. -- Liam Irwin North Munster Antiquarian Journal

Ciaran O Murchadha is a specialist in modern Irish history.His earlier Famine study, Sable Wings over the Land (1998), has been acclaimed as opening new ground in the study of the Great Famine.

Preface Prologue 1. An Emerging People: The Pre-Famine Irish 2. A Long Farewell to the White Potatoes: The Coming of the Blight 3. One Wide Waste of Putrefying Vegetation: The Second Failure of the Potato 4. The Blessed Effects of Political Economy: Public Works and Soup Kitchens 5. Emaciated Frames and Livid Countenances: From Fever Pandemic to Amended Poor Law 6. Asylum by the Neighbouring Ditches: The Famine Clearances 7. Leaving this Land of Plagues: The Famine Emigrations 8. Exiled from Humanity: The Last Years of the Famine 9. The Murdered Sleeping Silently: Aftermath Source Notes Notes Bibliography Index

General Fields

  • : 9781472507785
  • : Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • : Bloomsbury Academic
  • : 01 May 2013
  • : 234mm X 156mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : 01 August 2013
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Ciaran O Murchadha
  • : Paperback
  • : 941.5081
  • : 272
  • : 8