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The paperback edition of the extremely popular The Men of No Property is a study of the popular dimensions of Irish radicalism in the age of the French revolution. It focuses on the lower-class secret society, the Defenders, and the more familiar face of radicalism in this period, the Society of United Irishmen. Particular attention is paid to the vigorous traditions of street protest in eighteenth-century Dublin. The picture which emerges is of a revolutionary movement which was both more radical in its rhetoric and objectives and more popular in its social base than has previously been allowed.Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Preface to the 1998 Reprint Map of Ireland Introduction Eighteenth-Century Ireland: Politics, Economy, Society Agrarian Rebels, Secret Societies and Defenders, 1761-91 'Rumours of War': The Catholic Agitation, 1791-3 Radical Ideology, Popular Politics and Parliamentary Reform The Rise of the Defenders, 1793-5 From Pre-Industrial Crowd to Revolutionary Underground: Dublin's Street Politics, 1759-97 The Politics of Disaffection, 1795-9 Conclusion Notes Select Bibliography IndexJIM SMYTH, a graduate of Trinity College, Dublin and Cambridge University, is Associate Professor of Irish and British History at the University of Notre Dame. Formerly a Research Fellow at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, Dr Smyth has taught at Christ Church, Oxford, and Robinson College, Cambridge.
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