Academic literature on the topic 'Meath (Ireland)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Meath (Ireland)"

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Booker, Sparky. "Irish clergy and the diocesan church in the ‘four obedient shires’ of Ireland, c.1400–c.1540." Irish Historical Studies 39, no. 154 (November 2014): 179–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400019052.

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In 1435 the Irish council complained to Henry VI that there is not left in the nether parts of the counties of Dublin, Meath, Louth, and Kildare, that join together, out of the subjection of the said enemies and rebels scarcely thirty miles in length and twenty miles in breadth, thereas a man may surely ride or go in the said counties to answer to the king’s writs and to his commandments.The letter was accompanied by a request that the king render payment due to the lord lieutenant Thomas Stanley for his service in Ireland, and also suggested that the king should travel to the colony to help fight off its enemies. Accordingly, the perilous state of English Ireland was almost certainly exaggerated to strengthen the arguments for financial and military support from the crown. Nevertheless this letter demonstrates that in the minds of the settler elite, which staffed the Irish council, the four counties of Dublin, Meath, Louth, and Kildare were the bastion of English rule in Ireland, beset, the council would have us believe, by enemies on all sides. This picture of the ‘four counties’ as the political, and to a certain extent the cultural, stronghold of Englishness in Ireland can be found in other contemporary sources, as the region was perceived as both distinct and distinctly English.
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Dowling, Ger. "Exploring the Hidden Depths of Tara’s Hinterland: Geophysical Survey and Landscape Investigations in the Meath–North Dublin Region, Eastern Ireland." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 81 (August 28, 2015): 61–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ppr.2015.11.

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This paper explores how geophysical survey, undertaken in conjunction with landscape and historical analysis, is contributing to a deeper understanding of prehistoric focal centres and landscape organisation in the wider ‘hinterland’ of the Hill of Tara, Co. Meath. Arising out of the Discovery Programme’s ‘Late Iron Age and ‘Roman’ Ireland’ (LIARI) Project, the present investigations targeted a number of prominent hilltop sites in the Meath–north Dublin region suspected, on the basis of archaeological, topographical, and early documentary evidence, to have been important ceremonial/political centres in later prehistory. Foremost among these are the Hill of Lloyd (Co. Meath), the location of a prehistoric enclosure overlooking the early monastic foundation at Kells; Faughan Hill (Co. Meath), the traditional burial place of Niall of the Nine Hostages; and Knockbrack (Co. Dublin), whose summit is crowned by a large, internally-ditched enclosure with central burial mound. The discovery through this multi-disciplinary study of additional large-scale enclosures, burial monuments, and other significant archaeological features serves to further corroborate the deep historical importance of these sites, and opens up new avenues for exploring such themes as territoriality, social organisation, and identity in the wider Tara region.
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Walshe, Helen Coburn. "Enforcing the Elizabethan settlement: the vicissitudes of Hugh Brady, bishop of Meath, 1563–84." Irish Historical Studies 26, no. 104 (November 1989): 352–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021121400010117.

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Why the Reformation failed in Ireland was, until recent years, a matter for little debate. That it failed was beyond question and that its failure was inevitable was a premise seldom challenged. For many Irish historians, the root of its failure lay in the unswerving faith of a gallant people who resisted the attempts of a conquering force to impose upon them a creed at once heretical and foreign. Indeed, it was not until Brendan Bradshaw initiated a whole new approach to the history of the sixteenth century that this kind of view began to be firmly discarded. Others, like Nicholas Canny and, more recently, Steven Ellis and Alan Ford, have joined Bradshaw in questioning some of the old orthodoxies. The result of these endeavours has been, above all, to uncover the fact that the course of the Reformation in Ireland and the reasons for its failure were infinitely more complex than we once believed and, rather unexpectedly, one of the most tantalising issues raised by the debates which Bradshaw’s work has provoked has been the problem of precisely when the Reformation may be said to have failed in Ireland. Bradshaw and Canny have conflicting answers to that question and some of them will be considered here.
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Anbinder, Tyler, and Hope McCaffrey. "Which Irish men and women immigrated to the United States during the Great Famine migration of 1846–54?" Irish Historical Studies 39, no. 156 (November 2015): 620–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2015.22.

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AbstractDespite the extensive scholarly literature on both the Great Famine in Ireland and the Famine immigration to the United States, little is known about precisely which Irish men and women emigrated from Ireland in the Famine era. This article makes use of a new dataset comprised of 18,000 Famine-era emigrants (2 per cent of the total) who landed at the port of New York from 1846 to 1854 and whose ship manifests list their Irish county of origin. The data is used to estimate the number of emigrants from each county in Ireland who arrived in New York during the Famine era. Because three-quarters of all Irish immigrants intending to settle in the United States took ships to New York, this dataset provides the best means available for estimating the origins of the United States’s Famine immigrants. The authors find that while the largest number of Irish immigrants came from some of Ireland’s most populous counties, such as Cork, Galway, and Tipperary, surprisingly large numbers also originated in Counties Cavan, Meath, Dublin, and Queen’s County, places not usually associated with the highest levels of emigration. The data also indicates that the overall level of emigration in the Famine years was significantly higher than scholars have previously understood.
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Day, John J., and A. John Richards. "Taraxacum pseudomarklundii, a south-western European species, native in South Devon (v.c.3)." British & Irish Botany 2, no. 1 (February 26, 2020): 73–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.33928/bib.2020.02.073.

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An enigmatic dandelion first collected in the UK in 2014 from a lanebank on Dartmoor (v.c.3) has been determined as Taraxacum pseudomarklandii (Soest), previously only known from north-west Spain and south-west France, an unusual biogeographic alliance in our Taraxacum-flora. It is triploid (2n = 24). This taxon has now been confirmed from several locations in South Devon and one site in Ireland (Meath, v.c.H22).
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Bulas, Ryszarda M. "Wysokie krzyże iryjskie a grobowce Edessy." Vox Patrum 55 (July 15, 2010): 111–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.31743/vp.4328.

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The author in the article refers to a broad discussion on the origin of ideas and artistic inspiration for Celtic crosses. She refers to a Hilary Richardson of the Armenian and Georgian origin of the concept of the Celtic cross, also to the results of her book The symbols of pagan Celtic crosses. Myths, symbols, images. In this book she indicates a cultural affinity of Ireland and the Syria. She points to the compositional and iconographic parallels between the Early Medieval Irish crosses and tombs mosaics of Edessa, dated to the III century. Reinforcing the thesis of H. Richardson, indicates the possibility of the existence an artistic tradition, in Late Antiquity and Early Medieval Syria, which is able to reach Ireland. She indicates the Celtic crosses, which have the most parallels with Syrian decoration (monasteries from Arboe, Monasterboice, Kells, Clones). The author concludes that they are grouped only in the Middle East of Ireland, in several counties (Louth, Meath, Monaghan, Tyron).
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Strogen, Peter, Gareth Li Jones, and Ian D. Somerville. "Stratigraphy and sedimentology of lower carboniferous (Dinantian) boreholes from West Co. Meath, Ireland." Geological Journal 25, no. 2 (April 1990): 103–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gj.3350250204.

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Tempest, Laura, Nick Teed, and Nancy Georgi. "Thomas Jervais and the East Window of Agher Parish Church, County Meath, Ireland." Glass Technology: European Journal of Glass Science and Technology Part A 59, no. 1 (February 22, 2018): 11–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.13036/17533546.59.1.102.

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MOWAT, ROBERT J. C. "Shipwreck Inventory of Ireland: Louth, Meath, Dublin and Wicklow - Edited by Karl Brady." International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 39, no. 2 (August 3, 2010): 460–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1095-9270.2010.00290_15.x.

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Marshall, Alan. "Colonel Thomas Blood and the Restoration Political Scene." Historical Journal 32, no. 3 (September 1989): 561–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x00012425.

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Thomas Blood was born in Sarney, county Meath in Ireland around the year 1618. The circumstances surrounding his early life are obscure but his father was said to have been a blacksmith and ironworker of ‘no inferior credit’. Blood's first real appearance in the historical record occurs during the survey taken in Ireland in the period 1654–6. In this he is listed as a protestant who had owned some 220 acres of land at Sarney since at least 1640. In between these dates, however, Blood had evidently undertaken some sort of military service. The evidence concerning this military service is both slight and contradictory and there is at least the possibility that his later claims about an army career were partly bogus, or certainly inflated to suit his particular company.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Meath (Ireland)"

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Anderson, Iain Kerr. "Ore depositional processes in the formation of the Navan zinc/lead deposit, Co. Meath, Ireland." Thesis, University of Strathclyde, 1990. http://oleg.lib.strath.ac.uk:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=23503.

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Hogan, Arlene. "The priory of Llanthony Prima and Secunda in Ireland, 1172-1541 : lands, patronage and politics /." Dublin ; Portland : Or. : Four Courts Press, 2008. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb41237923d.

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Abraham, Alfred Samuel Kennedy. "Patterns of landholding and architectural patronage in late medieval Meath : a regional study of the landholding classes, tower-houses and parish churches in Ireland, c.1300-c.1540." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 1991. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.334494.

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Hanrahan, Kevin F. "Consumer and import demand models for meat in the UK and Ireland : a Bayesian approach /." free to MU campus, to others for purchase, 2000. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/mo/fullcit?p9999291.

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Books on the topic "Meath (Ireland)"

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Hickey, Graham. Meath Street & Francis Street. Dublin: Dublin Civic Trust, 2008.

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Meath Street & Francis Street. Dublin: Dublin Civic Trust, 2008.

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Meath (Ireland). Meath County Council., ed. A history of Meath County Council, 1899-1999: A century of democracy in Meath. Comhairle Chontae na Mí: Meath County Council, 1999.

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Gatenby, Peter. Dublin's Meath Hospital, 1753-1996. Dublin: Town House, 1996.

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W, Lynch D., and Mulvany M. J. A, eds. History of Killeen Castle, County Meath, Ireland. Dunsany, Co.Meath: Carty/Lynch, 1991.

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Jane, Fenlon, and Ireland. Dúchas, the Heritage Service., eds. Trim Castle, Co. Meath. [Dublin?: Stationery Office?], 2002.

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Baker, Christine. The archaeology of Killeen Castle, Co. Meath. Dublin, Ireland: Wordwell, 2009.

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Baker, Christine. The archaeology of Killeen Castle, Co. Meath. Dublin, Ireland: Wordwell, 2009.

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The archaeology of Killeen Castle, Co. Meath. Dublin, Ireland: Wordwell, 2009.

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Deadlock: The Dublin vs Meath 1991. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Meath (Ireland)"

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Fahy, Edward, and Joanne Gaffney. "Growth statistics of an exploited razor clam (Ensis siliqua) bed at Gormanstown, Co Meath, Ireland." In Coastal Shellfish — A Sustainable Resource, 139–51. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-0434-3_14.

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Moss, B. W. "Meat Quality in Progeny Test Pigs in Northern Ireland." In Evaluation and Control of Meat Quality in Pigs, 225–37. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-3301-9_18.

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"Anti-incineration: Galway, Meath and Cork." In The Environmental Movement in Ireland, 157–80. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6812-6_11.

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Newman, Conor. "Notes on four cursus-like monuments in County Meath, Ireland." In Pathways and Ceremonies, 141–47. Oxbow Books, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh1dpqv.17.

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Hennessy, Mark. "Adapting a Medieval Urban Landscape in Nineteenth-century Ireland: The Example of Trim, County Meath." In Lords and Towns in Medieval Europe, 483–92. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315250182-23.

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"Field Of Fire: Evidence For Wartime Conflict In A 17th-Century Cottier Settlement In County Meath, Ireland." In Scorched Earth, 173–95. BRILL, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004164482.i-330.68.

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Bradley, Richard. "From Centre to Circumference." In The Idea of Order. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199608096.003.0018.

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This book began with one site in Ireland and closes with another. The Loughcrew Hills in County Meath include at least twenty-five megalithic tombs, located on three summits along a prominent ridge. Many of them were investigated in the nineteenth century when Neolithic artefacts were found there. More recent work has been less extensive but features an analysis of the carved decoration inside these monuments, for the Loughcrew complex is one of the main concentrations of megalithic art in Europe (Shee Twohig 1981: 205–20). Early excavation in the westernmost group of monuments had an unexpected result, for Cairn H contained a remarkable collection of artefacts which must have been deposited three thousand years after the tomb was built. They included bronze and iron rings, glass beads, and over four thousand bone flakes (Conwell 1873). A new excavation took place in 1943, but its results only added to the confusion and, perhaps for that reason, they were not published for more than six decades (Raftery 2009). They seemed to show that the artefacts, which obviously date from the Iron Age, were directly associated with the construction of the monument; today it seems more likely that they were a secondary deposit. When they were introduced to the site, the tomb may have been rebuilt. One reason why the bone flakes attracted so much attention is that a small number of them—about a hundred and fifty in all— were decorated in the same style as Iron Age metalwork. Most of the patterns are curvilinear and show the special emphasis on circles and arcs that characterize ‘Celtic’ art (Raftery 1984: 251–63). This discovery illustrates a problem in Irish archaeology. A few stone tombs in other regions were decorated in a style that has been identified as either Neolithic or Iron Age (Shee Twohig 1981: 235–6), but in the case of the flakes from Loughcrew there is no such ambiguity. Not only do the incised patterns compare closely with those on metalwork, the decorated artefacts were associated with beads and rings dating to the end of the first millennium BC. Even so, two problems remain.
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Conference papers on the topic "Meath (Ireland)"

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Barton, K., C. Brady, and M. Seaver. "Some Geophysical Survey Methodologies for Archaeological Research in the Brú na Bóinne World Heritage Site, County Meath, Ireland." In Near Surface 2011 - 17th EAGE European Meeting of Environmental and Engineering Geophysics. Netherlands: EAGE Publications BV, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.20144400.

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Egan, D., S. Spense, J. Dooley, and P. Naughton. "The Characterization of Salmonella isolated from Pig Meat in Northern Ireland by PFGE and Antibiotic Resistance Profiles." In Seventh International Symposium on the Epidemiology and Control of Foodborne Pathogens in Pork. Iowa State University, Digital Press, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.31274/safepork-180809-111.

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McLean, DJ, M. leblanc-Maridor, RJ Hall, NE Moore, K. Cullen, CR Brooks, J. Benschop, et al. "633 Airborne dispersion of leptospirosis in a meat processing plant." In 32nd Triennial Congress of the International Commission on Occupational Health (ICOH), Dublin, Ireland, 29th April to 4th May 2018. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/oemed-2018-icohabstracts.605.

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Knuppel, A., K. Papier, PN Appleby, TJ Key, and A. Perez-Cornago. "OP31 Meat intake and cancer risk: prospective analyses in UK biobank." In Society for Social Medicine and Population Health and International Epidemiology Association European Congress Annual Scientific Meeting 2019, Hosted by the Society for Social Medicine & Population Health and International Epidemiology Association (IEA), School of Public Health, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland, 4–6 September 2019. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-ssmabstracts.31.

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Mensah, DO, O. Oyebode, RA Nunes, and R. Lillywhyte. "P39 Meat, fruit and vegetable consumption in sub-saharan africa: a systematic review and meta-regression." In Society for Social Medicine and Population Health and International Epidemiology Association European Congress Annual Scientific Meeting 2019, Hosted by the Society for Social Medicine & Population Health and International Epidemiology Association (IEA), School of Public Health, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland, 4–6 September 2019. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2019-ssmabstracts.190.

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