9 research outputs found

    «A Fellowship of Disaffection » : Irish-South African Relations from the Anglo-Boer War to the Pretoriastroika 1902-1991

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    Obscured by the passage of time and the international campaign against apartheid, South Africa ranks alongside France and the United States of America as a major external ideological influence on the development of modern Irish nationalism. The Irish also contributed greatly to every aspect of South African life, political, administrative, military, commercial and ecclesiastical. This paper is a welcome reappraisal of the Irish — South African connection.Quoique le temps et l'agitation anti-apartheid aient eu tendance Ă  le faire oublier, l'Afrique du Sud est avec la France et les Etats-Unis d'AmĂ©rique le pays qui a exercĂ© la plus forte influence idĂ©ologique externe sur le dĂ©veloppement du nationalisme irlandais contemporain. De mĂȘme, les Irlandais ont marquĂ© de leur empreinte la vie sud-africaine dans ses moindres aspects : politique, administratif, militaire, et ecclĂ©siastique. Cet article est une mise Ă  jour bienvenue de l'ensemble des relations irlando -sud-africaines.Lowry Donal. «A Fellowship of Disaffection » : Irish-South African Relations from the Anglo-Boer War to the Pretoriastroika 1902-1991. In: Études irlandaises, n°17-2, 1992. pp. 105-121

    THE SOUTH AFRICAN WAR RE-SURVEYED The South African War, 1899–1902

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    Rethinking Empire in Southern Africa

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    Henrichsen D, Miescher G, Rassool C, Rizzo L. Rethinking Empire in Southern Africa. Journal of Southern African Studies. 2015;41(3: South African Empire):431-435
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