Academic literature on the topic 'Bloody Sunday, Dublin, Ireland, 1920'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bloody Sunday, Dublin, Ireland, 1920"

1

DOLAN, ANNE. "KILLING AND BLOODY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1920." Historical Journal 49, no. 3 (September 2006): 789–810. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x06005516.

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21 November 1920 began with the killing of fourteen men in their flats, boarding houses, and hotel rooms in Dublin. The Irish Republican Army (IRA) alleged that they were British spies. That afternoon British forces retaliated by firing on a crowd of supporters at a Gaelic football match in Croke Park, killing twelve and injuring sixty. The day quickly became known as Bloody Sunday. Much has been made of the afternoon's events. The shootings in Croke Park have acquired legendary status. Concern with the morning's killing has been largely limited to whether or not the dead men were the spies the IRA said they were. There has been little or no consideration of the men who did the killing. This article is based on largely unused interviews and statements made by the IRA men involved in this and many of the other days that came to constitute the guerrilla war fought against the British forces in Ireland from January 1919 until July 1921. This morning's killings are a chilling example of much of what passed for combat during this struggle. Bloody Sunday morning is used here as a means to explore how generally young and untrained IRA men killed and how this type of killing affected their lives.
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Books on the topic "Bloody Sunday, Dublin, Ireland, 1920"

1

Bloody Sunday: How Michael Collins' agents assassinated Britain's Secret Service in Dublin on November 21, 1920. Guilford, Conn: Lyon's Press, 2003.

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2

Foley, Michael. Bloodied Field: Croke Park. Sunday 21 November 1920. O'Brien Press, Limited, The, 2014.

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3

Bloodied Field: Croke Park. Sunday 21 November 1920. O'Brien Press, Limited, The, 2020.

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4

Foley, Michael. Bloodied Field: Croke Park. Sunday 21 November 1920. O'Brien Press, Limited, The, 2015.

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5

Foley, Michael. Bloodied Field: Croke Park. Sunday 21 November 1920. O'Brien Press, Limited, The, 2014.

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6

Gleeson, James. Bloody Sunday: How Michael Collins's Agents Assassinated Britain's Secret Service in Dublin on November 21, 1920. The Lyons Press, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bloody Sunday, Dublin, Ireland, 1920"

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Mulqueen, John. "The KGB and Ireland." In 'An Alien Ideology', 107–38. Liverpool University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789620641.003.0005.

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A potential espionage threat to Britain from Dublin-based Soviet agents arose as the establishment of Irish-Soviet relations became a probability. This chapter examines perceptions of the communist-influenced Official republican movement as the Troubles escalated in 1971-2, with officials expressing fears for the stability of the Dublin government – the ‘Irish Cuba’. British and American officials used a Cold War prism here. The Russians could be expected to exploit the northern crisis, the American ambassador warned, using the Official movement as their ‘natural vehicle’. Following Bloody Sunday, when British paratroopers killed thirteen unarmed civilians, the British prime minister, Ted Heath, warned Dublin that the Soviets would cause as much trouble as they could, using the Official IRA as a proxy. The Irish revolutionary left too used a Cold War lens when opposing Ireland’s membership of the European Economic Community (EEC): it would lock Ireland into a NATO-dominated bloc.
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