Academic literature on the topic 'Connor and Dromore (Ireland)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Connor and Dromore (Ireland)"

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Farrell, Sean. "Building opposition: the Mant controversy and the Church of Ireland in early Victorian Belfast." Irish Historical Studies 39, no. 154 (2014): 230–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400019076.

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In 4 October 1842, Richard Mant, the Church of Ireland bishop of Down and Connor, presided over the first meeting of the Down and Connor Church Architecture Society in the Clerical Rooms in central Belfast. The scholarly Mant doubtless was in his element as he introduced this initiative dedicated to promoting discussion about historical and contemporary aspects of Anglican church architecture. The Ulster Times, the city’s self-proclaimed newspaper of the Church of Ireland, welcomed the new society, arguing that it was good to have ‘correct views’ on these matters and hoping that features like arched roofs, Gothic windows and lengthened aisles could be maintained so that Anglican churches could be distinguished from their Dissenting counterparts.
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Butler, Richard J. "Building a Catholic church in 1950s Ireland: architecture, rhetoric and landscape in Dromore, Co. Cork, 1952–6." Rural History 31, no. 2 (2020): 223–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0956793320000126.

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Abstract This article explores the intellectual culture of Catholic architectural production in 1950s Ireland through the study of a church-building project in rural West Cork. It analyses the phenomenon of the Irish ‘church-building priest’ in terms of their socio-economic background, fundraising abilities, and position within rural communities – in the context of significant rural emigration and economic stagnation. It also considers the role that the Irish countryside played in conditioning clerical understandings of architectural style and taste, and priests’ political readings of the rural landscape. Furthermore, it explores the phenomenon of Marianism in church design and ornamentation around the time of the international ‘Marian Year’ of 1954, and the political meanings of the rhetoric employed by clerics at church consecration ceremonies. The article concludes with reflections on social and economic aspects of Irish rural life and religious expression in a decade primarily understood as one of cultural insularity and conservative Catholicism.
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Orr, D. Alan. "England, Ireland, Magna Carta, and the Common Law: The Case of Connor Lord Maguire, Second Baron of Enniskillen." Journal of British Studies 39, no. 4 (2000): 389–421. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/386226.

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The treason trial of Connor Lord Maguire, second baron of Enniskillen, in February 1645 brought into focus competing conceptions of the constitutional relationship of England and Ireland. Maguire had been implicated in the plot to seize Dublin Castle on 23 October 1641 during the Irish revolt of that year and was tried in early 1645 before a Middlesex jury. The key issue of the trial was whether Maguire, as a peer of Ireland, having committed treasonable acts in Ireland and elsewhere and being brought “into England against his will, might be lawfully tryed … in the King's Bench at Westminster by a Middlesex Jury, and outed of his tryal by Irish Peers of his condition by the statute of 35 Henry VIII c. 2.” In the earl of Stafford's trial almost four years earlier, the defense had consistently assumed a position that will be termed Irish constitutional exceptionalism. Both Strafford and other apologists for his rule as Lord Deputy in Ireland during the 1630s adopted this constitutional stance in response to proceedings against them in both the English and Irish Parliaments during 1641. It held that while Magna Carta and the common law generally held sway in Ireland, because of circumstances unique to that particular kingdom, significant exceptions existed with regard to the legal rights and privileges these legal instruments conferred on the king's Irish subjects. In contrast, the case for Maguire rested on a view of the constitutional relationship of England and Ireland that emphasized a more closely shared heritage of legal privileges for both commoners and peers as guaranteed by Magna Carta and the common law—a position best characterized as constitutionalist.
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Connor, J. T. H. "Review Essay: Making Doctors, Preventing Disease – Medicine in 19th- and 20th-Century Ireland." Canadian Bulletin of Medical History 36, no. 1 (2019): 194–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/cbmh.36.1.connor.

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McCormick, Ted. "Moral geometry in Restoration Ireland: Samuel Foley’s ‘Computatio universalis’ (1684) and the science of colonisation." Irish Historical Studies 40, no. 158 (2016): 192–207. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2016.24.

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AbstractDespite the importance of the new science in the colonisation of Stuart Ireland, and the many Irish links to major figures in the Scientific Revolution, these connections remain relatively little studied outside of major episodes such as the Down Survey. This article examines a much smaller project, the ‘Computatio Universalis’ (1684) of Church of Ireland clergyman (later bishop of Down and Connor) Samuel Foley (1655–1695). Submitted to the Dublin Philosophical Society in 1684 as an attempt to ‘to demonstrate a universal standard’ of value, Foley’s project was in fact a guide to the achievement of ‘happiness’ through the careful stewardship of time and wealth. Foley’s project recalls earlier Christian humanist and Protestant concern with stewardship, however, and also reflects seventeenth-century economic writers’ and moral reformers’ concern with avoiding idleness. In the context of Restoration Ireland, however, it can also be seen more specifically as a project harnessing new methods of quantification for the cultural maintenance of a ruling Protestant elite historically threatened by degeneration in a colonial setting, as well as a reflection of Protestant anxieties about the Catholic church’s control over time.
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Ferguson, Frank, and Danni Glover. "‘My name is Death/But be na' fley'd’: Bishop Percy and the Ghosting of Robert Burns in Ireland." Burns Chronicle 132, no. 2 (2023): 187–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/burns.2023.0086.

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Recent decades have seen much scholarly exploration of Robert Burns’s impact on Irish writers, particularly those connected with the province of Ulster. Less explored is the antagonistic and opportunistic response to Burns in Ireland by a number of poets, editors and patrons. This article will chart Thomas Percy (1729–1811) and his literary circle’s responses in the Dromore area of County Down to Burns’s roles as poet, song collector and literary celebrity. It will argue that Percy and his associates reacted to Burns’s work and literary afterlife with a two-pronged strategy. First, they sought to emulate Burns through publishing or providing financial assistance to a number of texts of poetry and song. Secondly, they sought to establish a network of patrons and authors who employed literature as a means to portray a stable and loyal Ireland after the Union of 1800/1. As well as a heavily revised edition of Percy’s Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (1795), the group created platforms for a variety of poets including Thomas Stott, Hugh Porter and Patrick Brontë. This strategy sought to invoke Burns directly as an influence, but also implicitly to exclude his legacy from shaping the writing of the circle. This article suggests that the strategy was not fully successful. Despite the generally good reception of Percy’s fourth edition of the Reliques, the other authors in the circle did not always receive praise for their work, and writers like Stott were criticised for their weak, sycophantic verse. It will claim that for some of this circle, such as Hugh Porter, Burns’s influence played a major role in shaping the promotion of their writing careers. However, for many, there was an attempt to manage the trajectory of the writer’s work and career that minimised the agency and reach of the author. Ultimately, notwithstanding the attempts to quell and minimise Robert Burns’s impact in County Down, his inspiration remained powerful and difficult to contain.
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Ford, Alan. "High or Low? Writing the Irish Reformation in the Early Nineteenth Century." Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 90, no. 1 (2014): 93–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/bjrl.90.1.5.

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The Irish Reformation is a contentious issue, not just between Catholic and Protestant, but also within the Protestant churches, as competing Presbyterian and Anglican claims are made over the history of the Irish reformation. This chapter looks at the way in which James Seaton Reid, (1798–1851), laid claim to the Reformation for Irish Dissent in his History of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland. It then examines the rival Anglican histories by two High Churchmen: Richard Mant (1775–1848), Bishop of Down and Connor; and Charles Elrington, (1787–1850), the Regius Professor of Divinity in Trinity College, Dublin. It is clear that, in each case, theological and denominational conviction decisively shaped their history writing. Equally, however, significant advances were made by all three scholars in unearthing important new primary sources, and in identifying key points of controversy and debate which still represent a challenge to eccleciastical historians, of whatever denomination or none, today.
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Kazakevych, G. "UKRAINIAN O'CONNORS: THE FAMILY OF IRISH ANCESTRY IN THE CULTURAL LIFE OF THE 19TH CENTURY UKRAINE." Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. History, no. 132 (2017): 15–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/1728-2640.2017.132.1.03.

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The article is devoted to the O'Connor family, which played a noticeable role in the Ukrainian history of the 19 – early 20th centuries. A founder of the family Alexander O'Connor leaved Ireland in the late 18th century. The author assumes that he was a military man who had to emigrate from Ireland shortly after the Irish rebellion of 1798. After some years in France, where he had changed his surname to de Connor, he and his elder son Victor arrived in Russia where Alexander Ivanovich De-Konnor joined the army. As a cavalry regiment commander, colonel De-Konnor took part in the Napoleonic wars. He married a noble Ukrainian woman Anastasia Storozhenko and settled down in her estate in the Poltava region of Ukraine. His three sons (Victor, Alexander and Valerian) had served as army commanders and then settled in Chernihiv, Poltava and Kharkiv regions respectively. Among their descendants the most notable were two daughters of Alexander De-Konnor jr – Olga and Valeria as well as Valerian De-Konnor jr. Olga De-Konnor married a famous Ukrainian composer and public figure Mykola Lysenko. As a professional opera singer, she stood at the origins of the Ukrainian national opera. Her younger sister Valeria was a Ukrainian writer, publicist and political activist who joined the government of the Ukrainian People's Republic in 1917. Valerian De-Konnor jr. is well known for his research works and translations in the field of cynology.
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Mallon, Anita, Gary Mitchell, Gillian Carter, Derek McLaughlin, Mark Linden, and Christine Brown Wilson. "Exploring Resilience in Care Home Nurses: An Online Survey." Healthcare 11, no. 24 (2023): 3120. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11243120.

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Resilience is considered a core capability for nurses in managing workplace challenges and adversity. The COVID-19 pandemic has brought care homes into the public consciousness; yet, little is known about the resilience of care home nurses and the attributes required to positively adapt in a job where pressure lies with individuals to affect whole systems. To address this gap, an online survey was undertaken to explore the levels of resilience and potential influencing factors in a sample of care home nurses in Northern Ireland between January and April 2022. The survey included the Connor–Davidson Resilience Scale, demographic questions and items relating to nursing practice and care home characteristics. Mean differences and key predictors of higher resilience were explored through statistical analysis. A moderate level of resilience was reported among the participants (n = 56). The key predictors of increased resilience were older age and higher levels of education. The pandemic has exposed systemic weakness but also the strengths and untapped potential of the care home sector. By linking the individual, family, community and organisation, care home nurses may have developed unique attributes, which could be explored and nurtured. With tailored support, which capitalises on assets, they can influence a much needed culture change, which ensures the contribution of this sector to society is recognised and valued.
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Coppinger, Judith A., Roisin I. O Connor, Gerard Cagney, Dermot Cox, and Patricia Maguire. "Differential Agonist Stimulated Cytokine Release from Platelets: A Proteomics Approach." Blood 104, no. 11 (2004): 3540. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v104.11.3540.3540.

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Abstract Dept of Clinical Pharmacology, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin 2 Coppinger JA, O Connor RI, Cagney G, Cox D & Maguire PB. Recent evidence suggests that certain cytokines secreted by activated platelets can promote the development of atherosclerosis and thrombosis e.g the platelet specific cytokine platelet factor 4 (PF4) facilitates macrophage differentiation during inflammation and has shown to be incorporated into atherosclerotic plaques. In this study, we examined the release of several cytokines and other secretory markers from platelets stimulated by three different agonists in the presence and abscene of the anti-platelet drug aspirin. Using antibody array technology we detected the presence of 22 cytokines in the platelet releasate. High levels of abundant platelet cytokines RANTES, PDGF and EGF were seen throughout the arrays for all releasate fractions. The interleukin family were generally underrepresented with the exception of interleukin 8 and GRO. Several interesting angiogenic factors such oncostatin M (not previously reported in platelets) were present in some of the releasate fractions. Higher levels of cytokines were detected in the Collagen and TRAP stimulated fractions than in the ADP fractions suggesting that platelet secretion is an agonist dependent response. The levels of platelet secretory markers thrombospondin and PF4 identified from one dimensional gels by mass spectrometry were stronger in the Collagen and TRAP releasate fractions in keeping with the microarray results. Interestingly, unique protein profiles were obtained for the three different agonists. As platelet activation is COX-dependent we examined the effects of aspirin on cytokine release. Certain cytokines for example GRO were down regulated in the ADP and Collagen treated fractions but no significant decrease in cytokine levels were detected in the TRAP releasate. Cytokines released during platelet activation play diverse roles in vascular biology such as smooth muscle cell proliferation. These results indicate that that the release of platelet cytokines can be in part COX dependent, which may explain some of the anti inflammatory properties of aspirin.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Connor and Dromore (Ireland)"

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McBride, Stephen Richard. "Bishop Mant and the Down and Connor and Dromore Church Architecture Society : the influence of the Oxford and Evangelical movements, the Cambridge Camden Society and the Gothic Revival on the Church of Ireland and its architecture in Ulster 1838 - 1878." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.318793.

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McMullan, Gordon. "The Church of Ireland Diocese of Down and Dromore from a welfare state perspective, 1945-1980." Thesis, University of Ulster, 2004. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.400840.

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Books on the topic "Connor and Dromore (Ireland)"

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Foundation, Ulster Historical, and Church of Ireland. Diocese of Down, Connor and Dromore. Library Committee., eds. Clergy of Down and Dromore. Ulster Historical Foundation, 1996.

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William, Reeves. Ecclesiastical antiquities of Down, Connor, and Dromore, consisting of a taxation of those dioceses, compiled in the year MCCCVI.; with notes and illustrations. Braid Books, 1992.

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Leslie, James B. Clergy of Connor: From patrician times to the present day : based on the unpublished succession lists. Ulster Historical Foundation, 1993.

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Eull, Dunlop, and McKendry Eugene, eds. On the townland distribution of Ireland: A paper (1861) by William Reeves, sometime Bishop of Down & Connor & Dromore. Braid books, 1992.

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Albany, Macourt William, Down and Dromore. United Dioceses., and Connor Diocese, eds. Forty years on Diocese of Down and Dromore, Diocese of Connor, 1945-1985. Universal Publishing Company, 1985.

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McMullan, Gordon. The Church of Ireland Diocese of Down and Dromore from a welfare state perspective, 1945-1980. The author], 2004.

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Scott, Ernest V. The Church of Ireland, churches of the Diocese of Connor: An illustrated history. [s.n.], 1994.

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Duyckinck, George Long. The Life Of Jeremy Taylor: Bishop Of Down, Connor And Dromore. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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Duyckinck, George Long. The Life Of Jeremy Taylor: Bishop Of Down, Connor And Dromore. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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Ireland, Northern. Taxis (Dromore) Bye-Laws (Northern Ireland) 2005. Stationery Office, The, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Connor and Dromore (Ireland)"

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Scull, Margaret M. "‘To Remind Catholics that Support for the IRA and SF was not Compatible with Membership of the Catholic Church’, 1982–1990." In The Catholic Church and the Northern Ireland Troubles, 1968-1998. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198843214.003.0004.

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The Irish Catholic Church hierarchy became divided during this period marked by the installation of Bishop Cahal Daly, a conservative theologian, as the new Bishop of Down and Connor in 1982. Personality clashes between Daly and the staunchly nationalist head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, Cardinal Tomás Ó Fiaich, created tension within the Church. As Sinn Féin gained an electoral mandate, the Church struggled to condemn violence without isolating those who voted for the party. Analysis focuses on the institutional Church and grassroots clergy who were more united in the long-standing efforts to free the Birmingham Six, Maguire Seven, and Guildford Four. Bishop Edward Daly’s banning of republican paramilitary funerals in Derry constituted another challenge to republicanism from the institutional Church. By the mid-1980s, however, increased communication between Irish and English bishops resulted in greater Church-lead peace initiatives.
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Sneddon, Andrew. "The Bishop of Down and Connor and the established Church and state in Ireland, 1721–39." In Witchcraft and Whigs. Manchester University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7765/9781526130716.00016.

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