Castles

Castles
Title Castles PDF eBook
Author Plantagenet Somerset Fry
Publisher David & Charles Publishers
Pages 256
Release 2008
Genre Castles
ISBN 9780715326923

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Presents original maps, plans and archive illustrations alongside hundreds of photographs, showing ruins and surviving castles in their glory. This work includes descriptions of hundreds of special buildings, from remote ruins in isolated settings to imposing piles in towns and cities.

England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales

England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales
Title England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales PDF eBook
Author Keith Robbins
Publisher OUP Oxford
Pages 544
Release 2008-09-05
Genre Religion
ISBN 0191544183

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Keith Robbins, building on his previous writing on the modern history of the interlocking but distinctive territories of the British Isles, takes a wide-ranging, innovative and challenging look at the twentieth-century history of the main bodies, at once national and universal, which have collectively constituted the Christian Church. The protracted search for elusive unity is emphasized. Particular beliefs, attitudes, policies and structures are located in their social and cultural contexts. Prominent individuals, clerical and lay, are scrutinized. Religion and politics intermingle, highlighting, for churches and states, fundamental questions of identity and allegiance, of public and private values, in a century of ideological conflict, violent confrontation (in Ireland), two world wars and protracted Cold War. The massive change experienced by the countries and people of the Isles since 1900 has encompassed shifting relationships between England, Ireland (and Northern Ireland), Scotland and Wales, the end of the British Empire, the emergence of a new Europe and, latterly, major immigration of adherents of Islam, Hinduism, Sikhism and other faiths from outside Europe: developments scarcely conceivable at the outset. Such a broad contextual perspective provides an essential background to understanding the puzzling ambiguities evident both in secularization and enduring Christian faith. Robbins provides a cogent and compelling overview of this turbulent century for the churches of the Isles.

Scots and the Union

Scots and the Union
Title Scots and the Union PDF eBook
Author Christopher A Whatley
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Pages 441
Release 2014-04-14
Genre History
ISBN 0748680292

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This book traces the background to the Treaty of Union of 1707, explains why it happened and assesses its impact on Scottish society, including the bitter struggle with the Jacobites for acceptance of the union in the two decades that followed its inaugur

Ireland, Scotland, and England

Ireland, Scotland, and England
Title Ireland, Scotland, and England PDF eBook
Author Johann Georg Kohl
Publisher
Pages 580
Release 1844
Genre England
ISBN

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A Disunited Kingdom?

A Disunited Kingdom?
Title A Disunited Kingdom? PDF eBook
Author Christine Kinealy
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 148
Release 1999-04-13
Genre Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN 9780521598446

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When did the United Kingdom come into being? What were the steps which led to its conception? Was the creation of the United Kingdom a symptom of national coherence or of disunity between the countries that made up the union? Did a new national identity come into being after 1801, or did old allegiances and loyalties become more deeply embedded? Is the eventual breakup of the re-constituted United Kingdom inevitable? In seeking answers to these questions, and explaining how the United Kingdom has evolved, the author explores a number of key themes including:the steps to political union,economic change, religion, education, social welfare, war and national identity.

Britannia's Children

Britannia's Children
Title Britannia's Children PDF eBook
Author Eric Richards
Publisher A&C Black
Pages 420
Release 2004-05-14
Genre History
ISBN 9781852854416

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The stories behind the mass exodus from Great Brittan from 1600 to modern times

Domination and Conquest

Domination and Conquest
Title Domination and Conquest PDF eBook
Author R. R. Davies
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 168
Release 1990-06-29
Genre History
ISBN 0521380693

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This book, a revised and extended version of Professor Davies's 1988 Wiles Lectures, explores the ways in which the kings and aristocracy of England sought to extend their domination over Ireland, Scotland and Wales in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. It analyses the mentalities of domination and subjection - how the English explained and justified their pretensions and how native rulers and societies in Ireland and Wales responded to the challenge. It also explains how the English monarchy came to claim and exercise a measure of 'imperial' control over the whole of the British Isles by the end of the thirteenth century, converting a loose domination into sustained political and governmental control. This is a study of the story of the Anglo-Norman and English domination of the British Isles in the round. Hitherto historians have tended to concentrate on the story in each country - Ireland, Scotland and Wales - individually. This book looks at the issue comparatively, in order to highlight the comparisons and contrasts in the strategies of domination and in the responses of native societies.