Dictionary of Irish Biography 9 Volume Set: From the Earliest Times to the Year 2002 Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Dictionary of Irish Biography 9 Volume Set: From the Earliest Times to the Year 2002 Book

Over 9,000 entries outline the lives and careers of prominent Irish men and women, including writers, scientists, politicians and musicians.Read More

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  • Book Description

    Containing over 9,000 entries, and available both in print and online, the Dictionary is the most authoritative and extensive biographical resource yet published for Ireland. It outlines the careers of prominent Irish men and women in all fields of endeavour, including politics, religion, literature, music, entertainment and sport.

  • Product Description

    Where do saints rub shoulders with sinners, and eccentrics brush up against pillars of the community? In the monumental Dictionary of Irish Biography, just published by Cambridge University Press with the Royal Irish Academy and edited by James McGuire and James Quinn. At over 8 million words, it is the biggest work ever published on the lives of the Irish. The Dictionary is made up of 9,700 biographies written by over 700 contributors, and spans over two thousand years of Ireland's history. It includes the entries on those who made a significant contribution in both Ireland and abroad-from St. Patrick to Brian Boru, Grainne O'Malley to Maureen O'Sullivan, The Clancy Brothers to Jack Dempsey, Arthur Guinness to Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Samuel Beckett to Christy Brown and Michael Collins to Bobby Sands. The biographies are arranged alphabetically from Jacques Abbadie (d. 1727), a Huguenot refugee who became dean of Killaloe, through to Zozimus (aka Michael Moran) d. 1846), the Liberties-born balladeer. St Brigit is the earliest woman featured and the earliest man was Palladius, an envoy sent to Ireland by Pope Celestine. The most recent biographical subject is Dorothy Walker, writer and critic, who died in December 2002. Approximately 1,000 of the 9,700 people featured were born outside of Ireland. The shortest-lived person in the Dictionary is Nellie Organ (1903-08), a pious child from Co. Waterford, whose cause for beatification received widespread popular support after her death The most common surnames in the Dictionary are: O'Connor, Butler, O'Brien, Mac/McCarthy and Murphy. Amongst the least well known figures are: Vere Goold, the only Wimbledon finalist to have been convicted of murder, and Percy Ludgate from Skibbereen, Co Cork who was a pioneer in digital computing. This nine-volume work has recently been awarded the 2009 American Publishers Award for Professional and Scholarly Excellence (PROSE) for Best Multivolume Reference work in the Humanities and Social Sciences.

  • 0521633311
  • 9780521633314
  • 19 November 2009
  • Cambridge University Press
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 9672
  • 1
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