910 resultados para Hugh O’Neill
Resumo:
Existing evidence pertaining to Ireland’s Nine Years’ War (1594–1603) strongly lends itself to the impression that the majority of Old English Palesmen, at least those of higher social status, chose to support the English crown during this conflict rather than their co-religionist Gaelic Irish countrymen. Loyalties, however, were anything but straightforward and could depend on any number of cultural values, social concerns, and economic incentives. Nevertheless, James Fitzpiers Fitzgerald, a ‘Bastard Geraldine’ who served as sheriff of Kildare, seemed to have been driven by a genuine sense of duty to the English crown and establishment. With the outbreak of hostilities in the 1590s, Fitzpiers proved to be a devout crown servitor, risking life and limb to confront the English queen’s Irish enemies. But, in late 1598 he suddenly, and somewhat inexplicably, threw his lot in with the Irish confederacy, defying the government he had once championed. During the ensuing investigation, the Dublin administration accumulated much damning evidence against Fitzpiers, including a patriotic plea from rebel leader Hugh O’Neill which urged Fitzpiers to defend his Irish homeland from the oppressions of English Protestant rule. Yet, at the very same time, a counter case was made by Fitzpiers’s controversial English friend, Captain Thomas Lee, which argued that Fitzpiers’s actions were more loyal than anyone could have imagined. Through an examination of Fitzpiers’s perplexing case, this paper will explore the complicated nature of allegiances in 1590s Ireland and how loyalties were not always what they seemed.
Resumo:
Ireland was rarely a peaceful realm for Elizabeth I, but Hugh O’Neill, Earl of Tyrone and his allies brought the edifice of English power in Ireland to the brink of collapse. The war in Ireland at the end of the sixteenth century devoured money, lives and reputations at a prodigious rate. However seven years of Irish success ended when in 1600 the Queen appointed Charles Blount, Lord Mountjoy as Lord Deputy. Success replaced failure, but only after the new Lord Deputy transformed English strategy and rebuilt the army into an instrument fit for purpose.
Resumo:
Paul O'Neill's book, 'The Culture of Curating and the Curating of Culture(s)provides a concise overview of how curating has changed art and how art has changed curating. The book is divided into three sections, each dealing with a key transitional development: (1) the historical development of curatorial discourse; (2) the influence of the Biennial phenomenon and, finally, (3) how art and curating have converged since the 1990s. This review discusses the publication as a significant contribution to the development of a curatorial history and discourse.
Resumo:
Este trabalho analisa questões relacionadas a interação entre ciência e os valores de acordo com o modelo de desenvolvimento científico apresentado por Hugh Lacey. É realizado um exame das principais questões relacionadas ao ideal de uma ciência livre de valores, que possui raízes na defesa da autonomia científica feita por Galileu Galilei; o lugar que estes valores (cognitivos e não-cognitivos) ocupam e seu grau de influência dentro da pesquisa científica. Uma comparação entre as noções de paradigma e estratégia propostas por Thomas Kuhn e Hugh Lacey, respectivamente, são apresentadas, bem como as posições de Helen Longino como representante de um fazer científico feminista. Esta dissertação também apresenta o estudo de caso acerca da implantação e uso das sementes transgênicas. Mais do que um simples exemplo, o estudo de caso apresentado por Lacey abre oportunidade para a pluralidade de estratégias na ciência como principal modo de alcançar o bem estar de todos.
Resumo:
Meyrick, Robert, 'Hugh Blaker: Doing his Bit for the Moderns', Journal of the History of Collections (2004) 16(2):173-189 RAE2008
Resumo:
http://www.archive.org/details/conquestofcontin00burluoft