Papists and Prejudice Popular Anti-Catholicism and Anglo-Irish Conflict in the North East of England, 1845-70 |
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Author:
| Bush, Jonathan |
ISBN: | 978-1-4438-4672-1 |
Publication Date: | Jul 2013 |
Publisher: | Cambridge Scholars Publishing
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Book Format: | Hardback |
List Price: | USD $75.95 |
Book Description:
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"In this major treatment of the North East of England - one of Britain's most important centres of nineteenth-century Irish immigrant settlement - Jonathan Bush shows how anti-Irish and anti-Catholic feeling was more ingrained than historians have previously acknowledged. Bush challenges myths about how the liberal-radical traditions of the North East made the region's people welcoming of the Irish. In what is the most comprehensive analysis of the region's layers of anti-Catholicism...
More Description"In this major treatment of the North East of England - one of Britain's most important centres of nineteenth-century Irish immigrant settlement - Jonathan Bush shows how anti-Irish and anti-Catholic feeling was more ingrained than historians have previously acknowledged. Bush challenges myths about how the liberal-radical traditions of the North East made the region's people welcoming of the Irish. In what is the most comprehensive analysis of the region's layers of anti-Catholicism and anti-Irish hostility, Bush admirably places a check on the recent revisionist drift in the historiography and shows that hostility, prejudice and opposition were as commonplace in the North East as they were elsewhere." - Professor Donald MacRaild, Professor in History, Northumbria University "Dr Bush has transformed our understanding of Victorian anti-Catholicism in the North East of England. He greatly modifies the existing picture of the lack of such local sectarianism compared with Lancashire, London and Glasgow, by identifying the commonplace nature of religious disturbances caused by Liberal and Protestant Dissenting forms of 'No Popery', by the local Orange presence and by popular anti-Catholic lecturers, resulting in the embattled character of north eastern Roman Catholicism." - Dr Sheridan Gilley, Emeritus Reader, Durham University