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Law and revolution in seventeenth-century Ireland
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The operations of the Irish House of Commons, 1613–48
This is the first operational account of the Irish House of Commons in the early Stuart period, a time of immense change in early modern Ireland, when...
Author/Editor:
Bríd McGrath
Irish speakers, interpreters and the courts, 1754–1921
The extent and duration of interpreter provision for Irish speakers appearing in court in the long nineteenth century have long been a conundrum. In 1737 the Administration...
Author/Editor:
Mary Phelan
Law and the idea of liberty in Ireland from Magna Carta to the present
Magna Carta is among the most famous documents in the history of the world, credited with being the first effective check in writing on arbitrary, oppressive and unjust...
Author/Editor:
Peter Crooks & Thomas Mohr, editors
William Molyneux's The Case of Ireland’s Being Bound by Acts of Parliament in England, Stated
*A critical edition with introduction and notes* Regarded as the most celebrated Irish political pamphlet published before 1801, William Molyneux’s Case of Ireland, stated (1698) was written to...
Author/Editor:
Patrick Hyde Kelly, editor
Juries in Ireland
Laypersons and law in the long nineteenth century
*Shortlisted for the Dublin Solicitors’ Bar Association Law Book of the Year Award 2018* In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries a wide range of legal issues were decided,...
Author/Editor:
Niamh Howlin
The life and times of Arthur Browne in Ireland and America, 1756–1805
Civil law and civil liberties
Born in Rhode Island, Arthur Browne was a lawyer, a scholar, and a politician in the Ireland of the late eighteenth century and established a brilliant reputation...
Author/Editor:
Joseph C. Sweeney
Guardian of the Treaty
The Privy Council Appeal and Irish sovereignty
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council was the final appellate court of the British Empire. In 1935 the Irish Free State was recognized as the first...
Author/Editor:
Thomas Mohr
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