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The European Culture Wars in Ireland - The Callan Schools Affair, 1868-81 (Hardcover)
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The European Culture Wars in Ireland - The Callan Schools Affair, 1868-81 (Hardcover)
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"The European Culture Wars in Ireland" tells the story of Father
Robert O'Keeffe of Callan, County Kilkenny, and his conflict with
ecclesiastical authority. O'Keeffe's serial lawsuits against his
own curates, his bishop, and the cardinal archbishop of Dublin, and
his consequent removal as manager of a number of national schools
and chaplain of the local workhouse, commanded attention across
Ireland, the United Kingdom, and the world. In Callan, the town
split into warring camps, and riot became a part of life for nearly
ten years - the colourful local details eventually inspired two
novelists. To contemporaries, Callan and O'Keeffe mattered because
they seemed to be an Irish manifestation of a global
Catholic-secular culture war that encompassed both the definition
of papal infallibility and the German Kulturkampf. For a time, the
Callan Schools dominated British political debate, and O'Keeffe
secured a private meeting with Prime Minister William Gladstone.
Political fury at his removal from publicly funded positions at the
behest of clerical authority nearly wrecked the Irish system of
national education. In May 1873, the libel trial O'Keeffe v. Cullen
saw the competing claims of canon and civil law tested in
spectacularly public fashion as the island's first Roman Catholic
cardinal was tried before the Queen's Bench. "The European Culture
Wars in Ireland" traces the Callan Schools Affair from its origins
in 1868 to O'Keeffe's death in 1881. It examines not only the
riotous local events and the spectacular libel trial in Dublin, but
also the complex and politically charged response of the British
state. A new departure in Irish historiography, the book argues
that Robert O'Keeffe and his grievances could only become both
cause celebre and constitutional crisis because the United Kingdom
as a whole was an integral part of Europe, responsive to and
influenced by continental concerns.
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