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Published by University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, 2013
ISBN 10: 0299289540ISBN 13: 9780299289546
Book
Paperback. Condition: Fine. History of Ireland & the Irish Diaspora; 8.90 X 6 X 0.70 inches; 229 pages.
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Used offers from US$ 14.73
Published by Independently published, 2022
Seller: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
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Published by Royal Historical Society, 2015
ISBN 10: 0861933362ISBN 13: 9780861933365
Seller: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
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Used offers from US$ 23.53
Published by D. & J. Sadler, New York, 1860
Seller: Sleepy Hollow Books, Huntington, VT, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Blue cloth, gold lettering, no dj, edges lightly rubbed, ex-lib. Ireland; 31118.
Published by P.J. Kenedy
Seller: Books Revisited, Saint Cloud, MN, U.S.A.
Condition: Good. Teal hard cover with gilt text and green and red decoration on cover and spine, no dust jacket. Some minor wear. A few spots on covers. Previous owner name and partial address stamped inside twice. Clean text, tight binding! 1895 printing.
Published by Royal Historical Society, 2013
ISBN 10: 0861933206ISBN 13: 9780861933204
Book
Hardcover, no dust jacket. Very good. This item is at our location in Eugene, Oregon. 212 pp.
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Used offers from US$ 37.00
Published by Four Courts Press, 2006
ISBN 10: 1851828923ISBN 13: 9781851828920
Seller: ThriftBooks-Dallas, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less 1.65.
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Used offers from US$ 46.03
Published by John S. Burns & Sons, Glasgow, 1979
Seller: Stirling Books, Stirling, United Kingdom
Book
Paperback. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Paperback: Good+ Condition. No Jacket. Pages Bright, Clean And Unmarked. Binding Tight And Secure. Pages And Covers May Show Minimal Wear From Use And Shelf-Wear. Creased Spine. Photograph Is Added By Selling Site And Not Ours, Therefore May Not Reflect This Edition Or Condition.
Published by Routledge, 2016
ISBN 10: 1138664553ISBN 13: 9781138664555
Seller: GF Books, Inc., Hawthorne, CA, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: Good. Book is in Used-Good condition. Pages and cover are clean and intact. Used items may not include supplementary materials such as CDs or access codes. May show signs of minor shelf wear and contain limited notes and highlighting.
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Published by Kennikat Press, Port Washington, N.Y.
ISBN 10: 0804607796ISBN 13: 9780804607797
Seller: Burton Lysecki Books, ABAC/ILAB, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
Book
[0-8046-0779-6] [1970]. (Hardcover) Very good plus, no dust jacket. 296pp. Notes, illustrations. The top edge of the spine is lightly bumped. Book about Phelim O'Neil. Time Period. Publisher series: Irish History and Culture & Kennikat Press Scholarly Reprints. Locale:. (History--Ireland, Insurrections--Ireland, Rebellions--Ireland).
Published by London: Pickering and Chatto, 2012
ISBN 10: 1848932197ISBN 13: 9781848932197
Seller: Anselm Scrivener Books, Chapel Hill, NC, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: As New. Warfare, Society and Culture, vol. 6. xviii, 252 pp.; 15 figs., 10 tables. Hardback with laminated pictorial boards. Unread, as new. New list price: $99.00.
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Published by Boydell Press, 2009
ISBN 10: 1843834685ISBN 13: 9781843834687
Seller: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
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Used offers from US$ 83.29
Published by E.P. Dutton and Company, New York, 1920
Hardcover. Condition: Good+. No Jacket. Hardcover, page edges and spine face somewhat soiled, and tanned, light soiling and scrapes to boards, light bumps to spine ends and corners, several small closed tears to spine ends, otherwise solid, a Good + copy.
Published by Gale ECCO, Print Editions, 2010
ISBN 10: 1171059620ISBN 13: 9781171059622
Seller: dsmbooks, Liverpool, United Kingdom
Book
paperback. Condition: Like New. Like New. book.
Published by Kenedy/Excelsior Catholic Publishing (Kennedy), NY, 1895
Seller: Librarium, East Chatham, NY, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Kenedy/Excelsior, NY, 1885, 1895, (VG/no dj), 461pages, green patterned endpapers, 5"x 7-1/4", hardcover, green cloth with gilt titles and cover and spine decorated in red and green with shamrocks, two corners very lightly bumped, spine a bit darkened, no dust jacket probably as published, front hinge cracked but holding well, rear hinge just starting, former owner's small poem about book borrowing pasted on front end paper and ink name on preface page, otherwise contents clean and tight, book very good {Even though it says "Part I" on the title page this book appears to be complete in itself.} (VG/no dj) 3147 [Oss83EC].
Published by Printed for Robert Clavell, at the Peacock, at the West End of St. Paul's, St Pauls Churchyard, 1680
Seller: Dublin Bookbrowsers, Dublin, NONE, Ireland
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fair. First Edition. Pp. 327. [1 - blank], 138, [14], [1 - errata's] p. Multi-folding chart of the cost of the Rebellion. Covers damaged, nicked, worn & tatty. Spine lacking. Some edges of pages nicked but still sits loosely between covers. Bottom right hand corner of cover missing. Internally good externally poor. Ex library stamps inside. Else good.
Published by Cameron & Ferguson, London & Glasgow, 1880
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good Minus. No Jacket. Later Printing. London & Glasgow: Cameron & Ferguson, 1880. Mary Anne (Madden) Sadlier (1820-1903) wrote some sixty novels. Married to the prominent Irish Catholic publisher (who published his wife's work), she was pro-Catholic and sympathetic to the nationalist cause; she wrote in several genres. Despite her popularity, her work is surprisingly uncommon today. The First Edition of this novel was in 1860; this is a Very Good (minus) copy of what is probably a Later Printing. With no publication date, a bibliographer sourced in Copac guesses at 1882; Quercus assumes 1880 as perfectly reasonable as well. Green cloth binding, decoratively stamped with the title in gilt on cover and spine. The text is clean of marking, but there are some smudges scattered about. A previous-owner has stamped his name faintly in three places. The corners are bumped and the rear gutter has split. Size: 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Later Printing. Decorative Cloth. Very Good Minus/No Jacket.
Published by Printed by and for Oli. Nelson, at Milton's Head in Skinner-Row, and for Charles Connor, at Pope's Head, near Essex-Gate,, Dublin, 1743
Seller: Dublin Bookbrowsers, Dublin, NONE, Ireland
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Fair. To which are added Letters to and from Oliver Cromwell, Ireton, Preston . relating to the Sieges, Battles and remarkable Passages mentioned in the following History, never before printed; taken from Original MSS of Mr. Cliffe, an Intimate of Cromwell's and Secretary to General Ireton. Pages, xxii, ii (List of Subscribers), 420, 46, 8 (index), plus folding table (opposite page 230). Full calf covers. Front cover loose and literally hanging by a thread. Rear cover partial split at upper third edge of spine.Corners and spine ends bumped & rubbed. Some scuffing of covers and other extenal wear. F.e.p. lacking ant tile page is torn with loss. With the exception of occasional stains and wear internally quite clean and generally bright. Folding table torn with loss. Very scarce.
Published by Skibbereen, Inanna Rare Books & Art Publishing House., 2023
Seller: Inanna Rare Books Ltd., Skibbereen, CORK, Ireland
Art / Print / Poster
Luxury Fine Art Giclée Reprint of the Engraving which was originally created by Anthony Chearnley for Charles Smith but later pirated/printed without permission in London by publisher Philip Luckombe in the year 1788. Image Size: 21 cm wide x 13,7 cm high. Sheet Size: 27 cm wide x 19,7 cm high. Excellent condition. Copyright by Inanna Rare Books Ltd. [Price includes 23% VAT (32,72 ) / Net: (142,28 )] One of the earliest illustrations of Castle Loghort (Lohort). Philip Luckombe included this illustration in "The Compleat Irish Traveller" in the year 1788. It was originally created by Charles Smith in his publication "The Antient And Present State of The County And City Of Cork" (1750).
Published by J.J. Woodward, Philadelphia, 1830
Seller: Kubik Fine Books Ltd., ABAA, Dayton, OH, U.S.A.
Leather. 652p. A large hardcover book bound in brown leather with gilt decorations on the spine. Lots of scuff marks all over the cover and spine. Old ownership markings on the endpapers, one of which is dated 1840. Pages browned and foxed with age, but text otherwise quite legible and binding secure for normal handling. Two volumes in one, complete with five plates and two title vignettes. Measures approx. 10.25" x 8".
Published by E. Hunt, Middletown, Connecticut, 1832
Seller: Jim Crotts Rare Books, LLC, Clemmons, NC, U.S.A.
Hardcover bound in full leather. 597 pp. Illustrated with plates within the text. Nice condition overall.
Published by 1st ed Robert Clavel London, 1680
Seller: JIRI Books, Lisburn, United Kingdom
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Folio, [xxxii], 327. [1 - blank], 138, [14], [1 - errata's] p. Multi-folding chart of the cost of the Rebellion. Contemporary brown full calf, five raised bands, gilt on red lettering piece, all edges marbled. Very professional repairs to the head and tail of the backstrip and a new lettering piece, four leaves heavily tanned otherwise a near fine tight copy. First edition.
Published by Robert Clavel, London, 1680
Seller: The Kelmscott Bookshop, ABAA, Savage, MD, U.S.A.
A rather scarce book with an interesting history. Edmund Borlase (1620-1682) was an Anglo-Irish historian and physician. In 1676, Borlase published at London an octavo volume of 284 pages, with the following title: The Reduction of Ireland to the Crown of England; with the Governours since the Conquest by King Henry II, anno 1172 ; with some passages in their government. A brief account of the Rebellion, anno Dom. 1641. Also, the original of the Universitie of Dublin, and the Colledge of Physicians. The work was mainly a compilation from printed books, and terminated at the year 1672. The compilation of a history of affairs in Ireland from 1641 to 1662 was undertaken by Borlase chiefly with the object of demonstrating that the administrators of the English government there had not acted adversely to the royal interests nor unjustly towards Irish Catholics. For the purposes of his work, Borlase obtained a copy of an unpublished treatise on Irish affairs by Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon. This he unskillfully altered and interpolated, to make it accord with his views. Borlase's work, after expurgation by Sir Roger L'Estrange, was published at London in 1680: 'The History of the execrable Irish Rebellion, trac'd from many preceding acts to the grand eruption, the 23 of October, 1641, and thence pursued to the Act of Settlement, 1662.' The publication attracted little attention, owing to the defective style and absence of the author's name.[Wikipedia]. Folio in contemporary full brown rebacked leather. Binding is scraped, bumped, rubbed. Front hinge cracked but text block is tight. Interior pages are generally very good, with aging and some browning to margins. Includes the fold out chart showing the cost of the rebellion. Library stamp for the Washburn library in Madison WI stamped on front pastedown and title page but no other ex-library signs. 327 pages plus 138 pages of appendixes plus index. IRELAND/041521.
Published by Printed by and for Aaron Rhames, and are to be sold by the Booksellers, Dublin, Ireland, 1724
Seller: Aardvark Rare Books, ABAA, EUGENE, OR, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good Plus. Octavo, 7 3/4 in. x 6 3/4 in., pp. (xvii + pp.170 + + 171 - 200 + 201-245. The Sixth Edition. Contemporary paneled calf (8 3/4 in. x 6 1/2 in.) with embossed frame in blind to front and rear. Five raised bands to rebacked spine, with original gilt-lettered, red title label laid down. Small label ("Arbury LIbrary") to top of front pastedown, and armorial bookplate to center of front pastedown, though trimmed along both vertical edges so as to render the previous owner's name -- Josph Greene -- into "Oseph Gree". Previous owner's inscription and dated signature to front pastedown, with several words in the original first line, meticulously struck-through in several directions. The inscription now reads: "I value this Book (struck-through section) for particular reasons. Joseph Greene -- 1737." NOTE: Lacks engraved frontis. Title page in black and red. Several lines of penciled notes to bottom margin of title page. Dropcaps, tailpieces at chapters' ends, and (publisher-printed) side notes to margins. Pages supple, very clean, and only very minimally age-toned. Penciled (provenance) note to rear pastedown: "In Mr. Fletcher of Oxford's Catalogue for Sale in the year 1757, amongs t. Addenda in Quarto this book is valu'd. 7S." John Temple (1600 - 1677) was born in Ireland.and educated at Trinity College, Dublin and spent some time travelling abroad.[1] On his return he entered the personal service of Charles I and was knighted. Temple returned to Ireland and on 31 January 1640 succeeded Sir Christopher Wandesford as Master of the Rolls in Ireland and was admitted to the Privy Council of Ireland. When the Irish Rebellion of 1641 broke out in October he served the government in provisioning the city. On 23 July 1642 he was elected Member of the Irish House of Commons for Meath, being described as of Ballycrath, County Carlow. He tended to support the Parliamentary side and in August 1643 he was suspended from his office by the Lords Justices, Sir John Borlase and Sir Henry Tichborne, acting on instructions from King Charles. He was imprisoned in Dublin Castle with Sir William Parsons, Sir Adam Loftus, and Sir Robert Meredyth. The main charge against him was of writing in May and June two scandalous letters against the King, which suggested the King had favoured the rebels.[ After a year's imprisonment he was exchanged, and in 1645 was chosen MP for Chichester in the Long Parliament of the English House of Commons in compensation for the harsh treatment he had undergone. He received special thanks for the services he had rendered to the English interest in Ireland at the beginning of the rebellion" (ODNB) In 1646 Temple published his Irish Rebellion; Or an history of the beginning and first progresse of the generall rebellion raised within the kingdom of Ireland upon the . 23 Oct. 1641. Together with the barbarous cruelties and bloody massacres which ensued thereupon, which created an immediate and great sensation. Its statements were received with unquestioning confidence, as the work of a professed eye-witness who could speak with authority, and did much to inflame popular indignation in Britain against the Irish." ".The Temple.is probably the printed book that has had the greatest impact on Irish History. Although the events of the rising of 1641 were black enough in reality it was Temple's gross exaggeration of them, especially in regard to the massacres of protestants by the native Catholic Irish, that was taken thenceforth as a true historical record by Irish Protestants. This book, frequently reprinted, determined both the mythology and martyrology of succeeding generations of Irish Protestants who, drawing on the book, perceived of themselves as locked in a struggle between good and evil with a foe that was barbaric and cruel, that could never be trusted, and that must be driven either off or down if their Protestant community was to survive. That view that Temple created was dominant in the governing class in Ireland for centuries, and it still lives on in the north of Ireland today Subsequently, the truth of many of its statements have been questioned and it became viewed as a partisan pamphlet rather than an historical treatise. Temple's Irish Rebellion was often praised by authors hostile to Roman Catholicism, including John Milton and Voltaire. The Irish were so incensed against the book that one of the first resolutions of the Patriot Parliament of 1689 was to order it to be burnt by the common hangman. (Dictionary of Irish Biography) In the author's preface, Sir John Temple briliantly expounds: ".Most men are great lovers of themselves and such constant admirers of their own actions, as they think they do well to be angry at any thing that shall (though never so truly) be reported to their disadvantage. They consider not their own natural imbecillilties, their passions, distempers, or ill affactions which lead them on to advise or act things of an ill fame; but are ready to fly in the faces of those who shall even in the fairest characters represent or leave any impressions of them. Hence it is that the truth of things comes quite to be overshadowed with false colours, and so to remain as it were buried alive, or otherwise to appear extreamly disfugured through gross errors, base flattery, or willful mistakes. For most men that are present adventurers in this kind, are wise enough to apprehend their own danger; and thereupon departing fromt he common interest that every other man hath in their story, reflect only upon their own particular,and suffer themselves to be overawed with the humour of the present times; or so far transported, either with the benefits or private injuuries received from particular persons, as they transmit very imperfect and weaker relations, or otherwise fill them up with such counterfeit stuff, as posterity will owe little to their information.".
Published by Dublin, Printed by and for Aaron Rhames., 1724
Seller: West Coast Rare Books, Westport, MAYO, Ireland
The Sixth Edition. 21 x 16 cm. Engraved frontispiece, title page in red and black. xvi, 245 pages. Later half leather over cloth. Raised bands. Gilt title on morroco spine label. Gilt line decorations. Pale green textured end papers and blanks. Binding with only minor shelf wear. Internally age darkened. A very clean complete copy. See images. Sprache: english.
Published by London: Printed by R. White for Samuel Gellibrand, 1646
Hardcover. Condition: Good. The first edition of an eyewitness account of the Irish Rebellion of 1641 by Sir John Temple, the Privy Councillor of Dublin at the time that the hostilities broke out. Written from the Protestant English point of view, the account is heavily biased against the Irish Catholics. There were, in fact, atrocities committed by both sides during the conflict, but the narrative of Temple strongly prejudiced the English public against the Irish for decades to come, and served to justify the harsh measures taken by Cromwell against the Irish. 4to (20.5 x 15.5cm), 136, 55pp. Good, clean copy. Bound in contemporary calf, boards worn, inner hinge endpaper split but binding firm and sound. Rebacked in with modern calf spine.
Published by Patrick Campbell, Dublin, Ireland, 1713
Seller: Aardvark Rare Books, ABAA, EUGENE, OR, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good Plus. Sixth Edition. THREE books-in-one. NOT in Bradshaw Octavo, 6 x 8 in., pp. (8 - unpaginated "Preface") + 1- 176 + 1-4 + (19 unpaginated, "Heads of the DIscourse, An Introduction") + [1] + 1-344. Rebacked full calf with embossed frame in blind to front and rear. Gilt title to spine. Five raised bands to spine. Publisher's red stain to edges; red is well worn. Replacement cream endpapers. Two old inked signatures, struck-through, to top margin of titlepage. First page of preface partially detached. Age-toning to pages. At the end of this essay, a footnote reads: 'Reprinted by F. Dickson at the Union of Cork-Hill, 1712." Rare text. Not in Bradshaw. John Temple (1600 - 1677) was born in Ireland.and educated at Trinity College, Dublin and spent some time travelling abroad.[1] On his return he entered the personal service of Charles I and was knighted. Temple returned to Ireland and on 31 January 1640 succeeded Sir Christopher Wandesford as Master of the Rolls in Ireland and was admitted to the Privy Council of Ireland. When the Irish Rebellion of 1641 broke out in October he served the government in provisioning the city. On 23 July 1642 he was elected Member of the Irish House of Commons for Meath, being described as of Ballycrath, County Carlow. He tended to support the Parliamentary side and in August 1643 he was suspended from his office by the Lords Justices, Sir John Borlase and Sir Henry Tichborne, acting on instructions from King Charles. He was imprisoned in Dublin Castle with Sir William Parsons, Sir Adam Loftus, and Sir Robert Meredyth. The main charge against him was of writing in May and June two scandalous letters against the King, which suggested the King had favoured the rebels.[ After a year's imprisonment he was exchanged, and in 1645 was chosen MP for Chichester in the Long Parliament of the English House of Commons in compensation for the harsh treatment he had undergone. He received special thanks for the services he had rendered to the English interest in Ireland at the beginning of the rebellion. In 1646 Temple published his Irish Rebellion; or an history of the beginning and first progresse of the generall rebellion raised within the kingdom of Ireland upon the . 23 Oct. 1641. Together with the barbarous cruelties and bloody massacres which ensued thereupon, which created an immediate and great sensation. Its statements were received with unquestioning confidence, as the work of a professed eye-witness who could speak with authority, and did much to inflame popular indignation in Britain against the Irish. Subsequently, the truth of many of its statements have been questioned and it became viewed as a partisan pamphlet rather than an historical treatise. Temple's Irish Rebellion was often praised by authors hostile to Roman Catholicism, including John Milton and Voltaire. The Irish were so incensed against the book that one of the first resolutions of the Patriot Parliament of 1689 was to order it to be burnt by the common hangman. (Dictionary of Irish Biography) In the author's preface, Sir John Temple briliantly expounds: ".Most men are great lovers of themselves and such constant admirers of their own actions, as they think they do well to be angry at any thing that shall (though never so truly) be reported to their disadvantage. They consider not their own natural imbecillilties, their passions, distempers, or ill affactions which lead them on to advise or act things of an ill fame; but are ready to fly in the faces of those who shall even in the fairest characters represent or leave any impressions of them. Hence it is that the truth of things comes quite to be overshadowed with false colours, and so to remain as it were buried alive, or otherwise to appear extreamly disfugured through gross errors, base flattery, or willful mistakes. For most men that are present adventurers in this kind, are wise enough to apprehend their own danger; and thereupon departing fromt he common interest that every other man hath in their story, reflect only upon their own particular,and suffer themselves to be overawed with the humour of the present times; or so far transported, either with the benefits or private injuuries received from particular persons, as they transmit very imperfect and weaker relations, or otherwise fill them up with such counterfeit stuff, as posterity will owe little to their information.".
Published by Printed for Henry Brome, and Richard Chiswell in St. Paul s Church Yard, London, 1680
Seller: Healy Rare Books, Galway, Ireland
Condition: Rare. V.G. Folio. p.p. (xxxii) 327, 138 (Appendix), 14 (index) + errata and folding chart. Title printed in red & black. Cntp. calf with later label on spine.
Published by Printed for Henry Brome, and Richard Chiswell in St. Paul s Church Yard, London, 1680
Seller: Healy Rare Books, Galway, Ireland
Condition: V.G. Folio. p.p. (xxxii) 327, 138 (Appendix), 14 (index) + errata and folding chart. Title printed in red & black. Cntp. calf with later label on spine.
Published by J. Williams and T. Lewis, Fleet Street and Ruffel Street, Covent Garden London, 1767
Seller: Philosopher's Stone Books, Kingston, NY, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. a 5 X 7.5 inch hardcover in gray boards with title label to spine, 279 pages with rough cut edges, inner hinges intact, inside front cover board is bookplate of Irish activist Dr.Thomas Addis Emmet grandson of Irish-American Lawyer Thomas Addis Emmet who was a senior member of the revolutionary Republican group United Irishmen in the 1790s and New York State Attorney General in 1812-1813 whose elder brother Robert Emmet was a famous Republican Martyrs executed for leading the Irish Rebellion of 1803, there is dust tone to page decks and covers, the number 259 is written of bottom of spine.