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Politics and provincial people
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01 July 2010

This ground-breaking study is the first to systematically examine the politics and political culture of provincial Ireland. The book compares two distinct localities that provide differing perspectives on how politics and power manifested itself in provincial Ireland: Sligo in the north west and Limerick in the south west. Drawing on a wealth of previously unknown and under-utilised contemporary material, David Fleming focuses on individuals who were determined to shape the political landscape and those who were affected by their actions.
The book challenges many accepted models of how Ireland and the Irish were governed. While the propertied élite dominated many aspects of the political process, individuals and groups from the professional, mercantile, rural and other sections of society – the ‘middling orders’ – were also active in local institutions and office-holding. Their story, recounted here, reveals a far more complex set of relationships.
Politics and provincial people is a carefully constructed story of people’s motivations, ideas, and actions, and offers new insights into the complexity of their lives and the Irish political landscape.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / American Government / National, European history, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Regional Studies, Central / national / federal government
Provides a firm foundation for further research into the wider contexts of provincial sociability
James Livesey, English Historical Review, 127 (525) April 2012
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
List of figures
Introduction
Part I: County and borough politics
1. Sligo
2. Limerick
Part II: Provincial and political life
3. Office, public life and politics
4. An informal world
Part III: Agents of the state
5. The revenue
6. Soldiers and citizens
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index