Sisters of the brotherhood: female Orangeism on Tyneside in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries

The two ‘great unknowns’ of Irish migration history, women and Protestants, have received deserved attention in the decade or so since Donald Akenson first drew attention to them as lacunae in an otherwise growing field of scholarly concern. A review of the literature, however, demonstrates that Iri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Irish historical studies 2006-05, Vol.35 (137), p.40-60
Hauptverfasser: MacPherson, D.A.J., MacRaild, Donald M.
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creator MacPherson, D.A.J.
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description The two ‘great unknowns’ of Irish migration history, women and Protestants, have received deserved attention in the decade or so since Donald Akenson first drew attention to them as lacunae in an otherwise growing field of scholarly concern. A review of the literature, however, demonstrates that Irish women have benefited more than Protestants from recent research. Despite pioneering efforts, much of the work on the non-Catholic dimension tends to be general or indicative in approach, with little of the depth and range now associated with Irish women’s experiences of migration.
doi_str_mv 10.1017/S0021121400004703
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subjects Irish culture
Irish diaspora
Irish history
Irish immigration
Irish politics
Irish studies
Men
Protestantism
Womens rights
Womens studies
title Sisters of the brotherhood: female Orangeism on Tyneside in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
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