Library Catalog

Daniel O'Connell : Nationalism Without Violence /

Moley, Daniel

Daniel O'Connell : Nationalism Without Violence / Daniel Moley. - 1 online resource (246 p.)

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Introduction: An Old Widow's Tales -- 1 English Dishonor and Irish Decay -- 2 The Brawny O'Connells of Kerry -- 3 A Child of the Enlightenment -- 4 The Cockpit of the Courts -- 5 O'Connell and Religious Liberty -- 6 O'Connell, the Enemy of Violence -- 7 The Awakening of a Nation -- 8 The Association and the Catholic Rent -- 9 Triumph -- 10 The Price Paid for Victory -- 11 Parliamentarian and Party Builder -- 12 Fruits of the Whig Alliance -- 13 Rough Road to Repeal -- 14 The Meetings and the Prosecution -- 15 The Generation Gap -- 16 Peel and His Reforms -- 17 The Famine and the Break -- 18 Unfinished Journey -- 19 Aftermath -- 20 The Evolution of a Reputation -- 21 The Durable O'Connell -- Appendix: Selections from O'Connell Letters -- Index

restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec

Daniel O’Connell, as we bring him into focus, after generations of bitter criticism, misrepresentation, and neglect, becomes a very modern man. The principles which he held with such consistency and expounded with such consummate eloquence are, by modern standards, enlightened, even prescient. They are wholly pertinent questions which are of deep concern to all of us. The reader of history will perceive that the span of O’Connell’s life, 1775-1847, witnessed profound changes in political arrangements, in power structures, and in national boundaries in the Western world. One of the more important of these developments has been the growth of nationalism, not only here but throughout the world. As the national consciousness affected Ireland, it cannot be interpreted, even understood, except as it was awakened by O’Connell. He entered public life as an opponent of the Act of Union of 1800, a measure which was to infect British relations with Ireland for a century and a quarter. O’Connell earned and held in the Western world high rank among the individuals who promoted religious liberty and separation of Church and State, cardinal principles in the American tradition. Since the first half of his public life was devoted to the restoration of Catholic rights, he realized that he could not rationally insist upon rights for his fellow communicants which he would deny to others. His concept of true religion was of something lived wholly apart from interference or support by civil authority. As we shall see, he carried his zeal for religious liberty to the support of the Jews in their struggle to life the disabilities imposed by English law.


Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.


In English.

9780823209774 9780823295340

10.1515/9780823295340 doi


BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Historical.