, Brepols, 2024 Hardback, 203 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:18 b/w, 2 tables b/w. Language: English. ISBN 9782503604329.
This book explores the broad scope of political, economic, and social aspects of relations between Central Europe (focused on Poland and the lands of the Czechs) and Ireland. Taking a longitudinal approach, this study charts the interaction between the western and the central-eastern peripheries of Europe from the Middle Ages to the period after the Third Partition of Poland-Lithuania in 1795. The authors examine how the relationship between the geographically opposite ends of Europe evolved. Shaped by the shifts of political tectonic plates they argue that the evolution can be described in general terms: from a largely unidirectional to an interconnected chain of events. This book demonstrates similarities and analyses differences in a complex, yet unexplored, past of the three emergent nations; nations which in the public perception were overshadowed by their mighty neighbours for far too long.- Chapter 1. The Middle Ages Christianity in Ireland, Poland, and the Bohemian Principality The Earliest References and Research Chapter 2. Selected Seventeenth-Century Relations Religious Matters and Irish Martyrs as Models of Holiness in Seventeenth-Century Poland External Travel Destinations for the Polish and Czech Nobility Seats of Learning as Centres of Mutual Interest Czech Protestants and the Idea of Settlement in Ireland The Conquest of Ireland Unitas Fratrum in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth The Issue of Emigration and Oliver Cromwell Looking for a New Homeland: The English Proposal Conclusion Chapter 3. Towards Self-Governance in the Nineteenth Century The Irish, Poles, and Czechs at the End of the Eighteenth and the Start of the Nineteenth Centuries Mutual Interests In the Parliament of the United Kingdom The Period of European Revolutions Conclusion Appendix 1. Information Concerning Ireland Included in Polish Encyclopaedias Appendix 2. Selected Irish Biographies