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Who`s Afraid of the Easter Rising? 1916-2016 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R361
Discovery Miles 3 610
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Who`s Afraid of the Easter Rising? 1916-2016 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R361
Discovery Miles 3 610
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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One hundred years ago, Easter 1916, Irish revolutionaries rose
against the British Empire proclaiming a Republic from the steps of
the General Post Office in Dublin. The men and women of the Easter
Rising were defeated by the overwhelming force of the British Army,
in five days of intense fighting. Their leaders were executed. But
the Easter Rising lit a fire that ended with the whole country
turning against Westminster's rule, and founding a nation. But
today, the heirs to the Irish state are embarrassed about 1916.
They are ashamed that their state owes its origins to a revolution.
Along with academics and other commentators in the press and on
television they dismiss the Rising as the work of violent fanatics,
and the defeat of constitutional politics. Who's Afraid of the
Easter Rising? explains why today's Dublin elite are recoiling from
the origins of their state in a popular struggle. Where the critics
paint the Rising as an armed conspiracy, we explain that it was in
fact a revolt against war; not a militaristic upsurge, but the
first challenge to the awful slaughter of the First World War. The
Statesmen of Europe sacrificed millions upon the altar of war.
Their recruiting sergeants in Ireland, Edward Carson and John
Redmond sent 200,000 Irishmen into the slaughter and nearly 50,000
were killed. The Easter Rising drew a halt to British recruitment,
and the blow to the Empire was the first crack in a growing revolt
against the war, followed by the Russian Revolution in 1917, and
the German revolution the following year - which ended the
conflict. The Easter Rising was an inspiration to those who were
challenging the Empires of Europe, from India to Vietnam, from New
Zealand to Moscow; it was an inspiration to British activists like
John Maclean and Sylvia Pankhurst; and it was an inspiration to the
Irish men and women who rose up against British rule to free their
nation.
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