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Mission to a Suffering People
In 16th and 17th century Ireland religion and nationality fused together in a people’s struggle to survive. In that struggle the country’s links with Europe provided a life line. Members of religious orders, including the Irish Jesuits, with their international roots, played an important role.
Irish Jesuits in Penal Times 1695-1811
This account of the Irish Jesuits from 1695 to 1811 is concerned with those who lived and worked in Dublin and, in particular, with a central figure, the quite remarkable educationalist and pastor, Thomas Betagh.
Dom Eugene Boylan
In Dom Eugene Boylan Thomas J. Morrissey tells the untold story: the life of a prize-winning student, music-lover, ladies’ man and physicist who became the great spiritual writer of groundbreaking titles like This Tremendous Lover.
The Life and Times of Daniel Murray
Daniel Murray was undoubtedly the outstanding Irish Catholic archbishop of the nineteenth century. This comprehensive and well -researched biography gives a lively and accurate account of s contribution to church and society.
The Ireland of Edward Cahill SJ 1868-1941
Edward Cahill SJ was an influential figure in Ireland during the early decades of the new Irish State Eamon de Valera was a good friend of Cahill's and shared many of is views.
From Easter Week to Flanders Field
During the Easter Week insurrection, 1916, John Delaney SJ walked from one point of military activity to another, chronicling all he saw in his diary. This volume contains extracts from his eye-witness accounts of the effects of 1916 on ordinary people in Dublin and its suburbs.