Ireland Books
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wealth, power, and artReview Date: 2003-03-28
One of the best non-fiction history books I have readReview Date: 2004-06-06
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Brief but not superficialReview Date: 2002-07-01
The book is suitable for beginners as it is quite short and written in a comprehensible way as well as for people truly interested in the matter thanks to reliable bibliography record and references. It helps to understand the unusual political organization and the complicated and quite uncommon social structure of the Island in the middle ages. Obviously, history of medieval Ireland was greatly determined by the history of church, that is why the book deals mainly with the church's history, which was not less interesting in Ireland than political history. It is a very good book for a great start.
Brief but not superficialReview Date: 2003-04-13
The book is suitable for beginners as it is quite short and written in a comprehensible way as well as for people truly interested in the matter thanks to reliable bibliography record and references. It helps to understand the unusual political organization and the complicated and quite uncommon social structure of the Island in the middle ages. Obviously, history of medieval Ireland was greatly determined by the history of church, that is why the book deals mainly with the church's history, which was not less interesting in Ireland than political history. It is a very good book for a great start.

Used price: $2.00

Excellent, concise, and organized overview of Medieval History.Review Date: 2008-03-15
A fascinating reader...Review Date: 2004-05-23
This is also a Western civilisation reader - the Middle Ages is of a time as a well as of a place. The geography is Western Europe, from Ireland to Germany, from Scotland and Scandanavia to Italy and Spain. This was the land of Latin Catholicism, pollinated occasionally by Islamic culture from the south and Byzantine Christianity from the east, but largely undisturbed in its development. This culture represents a system of ideas political, religious and otherwise that formed much of the basis for modern Western culture, whose dominance in the world today is, for better or worse, unmistakable.
Cantor's anthology of 100 key texts is meant to simply the task of determining what is worthwhile reading from this period. Primary texts from the Middle Ages, so defined as comprising more than a thousand years, would include literally thousands of volumes - the output of writers such as Augustine alone could take a lifetime to read. Cantor arranges key texts topically, according to certain classifications - Nobility (including the primary families of the period, a sort of Social Register of royal and landed persons who controlled most of what would be considered state power), Church (the hierarchy and the overall institution), and the Middle Class (yes, there was a Middle Class, both urban and rural, that included knights, gentry, artisans and the like). Taking these classifications, Cantor arranges first texts that show them in as isolated a form as possible, then looks at the ways they interact with each other. The final portions of the text include works that look at problems and crises, and ends with documents of resolution, pacification and incorporation.
This is no mere chronology of texts - the emphasis here is on developing the patterns of society over time in the different strata. Literary works utilised include Beowulf, the Song of Roland, El Cid, the works of Dante, Chaucer, and Malory. Church writers from Augustine, Anselm, Bernard and Aquinas are combined with political writings from those such as Petrarch, Erasmus, and various anonymous documents and letters.
There are some real stunning pieces here - Bernard Gui's Inquisitor's Manual, Maimonides' reflections on Christianity (and one of his radical followers trying to explain why Jewish sex is preferable to Christian sex - something that must be read to be believed!), an account of the murder of Thomas Becket, and more.
Take and read!
Reading in the Middle AgesReview Date: 1999-02-18

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When he stops the rest of the world catches up.Review Date: 1996-08-03
The Science of History Meets the Art of MemoryReview Date: 1998-03-19
Starting from Braudel's call for histoire totale, through Yates, Bergson, Nora and others, Matsuda argues for the centrality of memory in history. For Matsuda, memory in education is revealed when "a child pronouncing Latin grammer manifested the living soul of the ancients by stirring up the timeless power of language," while memory and criminality evinces itself as "an atavistic criminal, a living prehistoric relic, imprinted in his body with the savage traits of his ancestors." Even the Tango, when viewed through the prism of memory history, demonstrates that " a fashionable dance [can be regarded] as both glittering entertainment and a pagan rite to the passions of the body...".
Armed with new terminology Matsuda next defines modernity and the apparent acceleration of memory and history. Technological innovations produced a cultural shift in memory and the perception of the past equal to the shift from oral to written traditions. Photographic and phonographic inventions "exteriorized" memory, challenging the perceived inviolable nature of time. In addition, technology and the new view of memory formed a novel role for history.
Positivism in history stressed the scientific approach to research and writing, empirical data, and the certainty of historical truth. The incorporation of memory into historical study invalidates the positivist formula for historians. Postmodernist histories in the same vein as Matsuda demonstrate (as he argues) that "history as a positivist or liberatory narrative gives way to a history of mnemonic traces...the past is not a truth upon which to build, but a truth sought." Viewed in such a manner, the individual images which Matsuda focuses upon each bolster his arguement for the re-historicization of memory while also standing alone as critical memory objects of the fin de siecle.
Thus the varied themes expounded upon by Matsuda, by the nature of his memory approach, fuse together to form a valued addition to the emerging field of memory history. The "constellation of memory places" charted by the author represents a step further in the evolution of this new historiography. The historian Patrick Hutton has argued that Matsuda's approach, as well as that of other memory specialists, "signifies a powerful reaffirmation of history's possibility as an art." If we accept this notion then perhaps we can also speculate on a future of hisoriography of a less dichotomous nature (battling between history as science or art) but rather a dialectical relationship--a reconciliation of science and art in the spirit of the Renaissance. For much in the same way Renaissance artists fused the new science of perspective with the aesthetics of art, history could benefit by integrating the critical and rational objectivity of science with the novel approach inherent in the art of memory.

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MendingReview Date: 2002-02-04
One of those books that refreshes and renews our language.Review Date: 2000-11-05

An Insider's Account of the Fight for Irish FreedomReview Date: 2000-12-30
The only book worth reading on Collins, a real gem!!Review Date: 1998-02-10


Michelin Tourist and Motoring Atlas: Great Britain and IrelaReview Date: 2000-06-09
Great guide!Review Date: 2000-07-05
Used price: $9.00

Very interesting and insightful into Irish loreReview Date: 1998-11-21
the faerie world of irelandReview Date: 2000-08-24
The author defines fairies at the begining so if your expecting a book solely on the peter pan type of fairy you may be disapointed, as he point out they come in all sizes and to add to that, there not all malevolent or benevolent for that matter... All in all it was quite eerie at points, but also very romantic and peaceful to read at night.

Do YOU really know who Montecuccoli was?Review Date: 2006-10-11
How to Wage War in the 17th centuryReview Date: 2005-07-19
After reading this closely, It seems that many of the myths that have developed around the tactics of the Thirty Years War -especially the role of firepower cavalry-may have started with some misreadings of Montecuccoli. These misreadings are not to hard to trace back to this book.
The book actually consists of three parts. First, a well researched bio of Montecuccoli, written by Barker. Second, a translation of Montecuccoli's Military Intellectual and Battle. Third, descriptions of several major battles of the 30 Years war. The descriptions rely on some old sources, especially the Breitenfeld and Lutzen battles, but are still well done overall.
Reccomended for historians, both amateur and professional, and wargamers of the period.

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quick delivery (during holiday season) and excellent conditionReview Date: 2007-01-15
Human nature has a compound middle name: Complexity Galore.Review Date: 2000-01-23
Preceding 1875, Spain's "anaemic" history of the industrialist/labourer relationship had long been existant from the 1830's. Throughout the book, the author serves to describe more or less emphatically, natural obstacles hindering the early Spanish industrial revolution. For over a thousand years, psychological and environmental differences amongst the varying regional mentalities and topograghies of the country were acutely (and still are) recognized and preserved by Castilians, Catalonians, Valencians, Asturians, Galicians, Andalusians, Aragonese, Leonese, Basques etc.
Hence, nineteenth-century economic needs and demands from both labour and industrialists were always at odds from region-to-region. Augmenting this basic complexity was the growing frequency of intra-party factions, electoral manipulation, church-burning, innumerous strikes and assassinations by both civilians and, an increasingly intervening military. The core issue throughout this time period: An effective, congruous establishment of a "national economic" vision entailing long-term growth. The entry into what was considered by some to be a "Godless" era of mass-modernity, were the traditionally-minded peasants, industrialists, conservatives and churchmen - for they feared the gradual, societal disintegration of Classical, Catholic Spain.
Yet astonishingly, there were those political, military, religious and civilian figures wanting to see a Spain fully industrialized via the exemplary French/English model. It is this overall social/political dichotomy (also recognized by Spaniards), that Mr. Carr gently explicates, the understanding of how such perennial intransigence (both an excellent and horrible human quality) on the part of all parties, generated the unfortunate broth for a "violent soup" that became the Spanish Civil War.
Post-civil war recovery, Opus Dei, growing consumerism, transition to democracy and the restoration of monarchy are covered in more general detail.
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Young starts his Prologue with: "In the 5th century storm upon storm out of the dark North swept away in a great deluge of barbarism all the civilization of the western half of the Roman Empire", and lays the foundation for how the Medici came to power in the 15th century, a power that lasted nearly 350 years.
There are chapters on the palaces, the art, and biographies of the most prominent members of the family, starting with Giovanni di Ricci (1360-1428), and ending with Anna Maria Ludovica (1667-1743). The longest of the histories is on Catherine de Medici, with all its fascinating intrigue, and my favorite is the chapter on Lorenzo the Magnificent (1449-1492), which also includes the short life of his brother Giuliano (1453-1478).
This has been a cherished book since childhood, when I loved it for its black and white illustrations; most of them are sublime portraits by artists like Bronzino and Raphael, and I fell in love with Botticelli's rendition of the above-mentioned Giuliano, mesmerized by the beauty of this painting (Plate VI). Michelangelo sculpted Giuliano for his tomb (Plate XXV), posed gracefully seated, wearing a breastplate, and also used his likeness for the famous statue of David. There is a difference in how Giuliano is represented by these two masters, but historians have noted that Michelangelo's interpretation is most like its subject.
It has copious notes, a wonderful fold-out Genealogical Tree, and a list of Authorities Consulted. For anyone interested in this era of history and the extraordinary Medici family, this book, though written many decades ago, tells its story in a fluid and riveting style, and is great reading.