What is remarkable about Michael Hopkinson's Irish War of Independence is the way he shows how random and circumstantial the revolutionary strategy became. Volunteers in rural areas improvised military campaigns often sanctioned retrospectively by their leaders in Dublin." Maurice Walsh, New Statesman"An objective and well-researched account of the events that led to the establishment of our state." Garret FitzGerald, Irish Times"Masterly... [it] has filled a major gap historical writing by placing the final stages of the revolution of January 1919 to July 1921 in the wider context of the Ulster Crisis of 1912-14 and the First World War." John Cooney, Irish Independent
The historian Michael Hopkinson, who has died aged 72, made an immense contribution to the understanding of the Irish revolutionary decade, 1913-1923.
Born in 1944, he was the son of a Church of England clergyman and an only child; he grew up in Wolverhampton and went on to study modern history at Caius College Cambridge. He studied at Cambridge for his PhD on “The Irish Question in US Politics, 1919-22”.
In 1970 he moved to Queen’s University Belfast where he taught American history. In 1974 he took up a lectureship at Stirling University in Scotland where he later became reader in history; he remained there until his retirement in 2009.
While at Stirling, he taught Irish history and published his groundbreaking history of the Irish Civil War in 1988 under the title Green Against Green. As the political scientist Tom Garvin noted at the time, “Hopkinson has finally broken the taboo on research into this crucial event in Irish political history and has given us the first full-length, archive-based history of the Irish Civil War”.
Taking advantage of newly released British state and private papers, Hopkinson was then drawn towards the War of Independence and edited The Last Days of Dublin Castle: The Mark Sturgis Diaries (1999), dealing with the experiences of the Dublin Castle civil servant who was part of a revamped British administration in Ireland in 1920 and oversaw the maintenance of the truce the following year. In 2002, Hopkinson published The Irish War of Independence, based on extensive research in Irish, British, American and Australian archives. Again, he emphasised the importance of regional variations in the conduct of the IRA’s campaign and concluded the war was “more an intelligence triumph for the IRA than a military one”, as well as underlining the contempt and sectarianism that marked the attitude of some of the British political and military establishment towards Ireland.
He also contributed the opening two chapters to volume seven of Oxford’s New History of Ireland in 2003, covering the Treaty and Civil War periods. He wrote highly regarded entries on Tom Barry, Erskine Childers and Michael Collins for the landmark Dictionary of Irish Biography, published by Cambridge University Press in 2009.
Hola, mis amigos lectores ✨ Hoy quiero compartir con ustedes mi primera vez leyendo un libro en inglés.
🇮🇪"𝑻𝒉𝒆 𝒊𝒓𝒊𝒔𝒉 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒊𝒏𝒅𝒆𝒑𝒆𝒏𝒅𝒆𝒏𝒄𝒆" es un libro de historia sobre la Guerra de Independencia de Irlanda. El autor presenta objetivamente tanto a los irlandeses como al británico al discutir éxitos, fracasos y temas.
Tomando un año entero para investigar y escribir un montón de hechos históricos y descripciones de los acontecimientos en Irlanda. Ideal si estás buscando en la historia irlandés, lleno de mucha historia, periódicos y fotos que representa este evento.
Me emocioné al leer en inglés y debemos seguir intentando para leer perfectamente, no pierdan la motivación. 🇮🇪 3/5
This book is not for the neophyte. Although it is impartial and even insightful, it refers to events obliquely. I found myself going to Wikipedia to find what happened with the German guns and what was the cause of the rift after the Easter Rising.
An awesome and comprehensive relay of events and situations that played throughout the period of the Irish Revolution. There are breakdowns based on year and breakdowns based on region/activity level. It is definitely the book to read after getting your feet wet with some basic facts first.
Extremely detailed with respect to individual local actions, the Irish political environment and the effects of different parties on both international and Irish policy.
Close, but no cigar. Focuses too much on the British aspect of the war effort. The rundown of the war in the provinces reads just like that - a dull recollection of major incidents from a seemingly disinterested writer.
He does provide good perspectives on more ignored areas of the war effort, such as the peace movements, De Valera in America, the British administration in Dublin castle etc. but I get the feeling this book is more about the war as viewed from London as opposed to the war of independence itself. A poor prequel to 'Green against Green'.