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Maps & texts: exploring the Irish Historic Towns Atlas [Mīkstie vāki]

Foreword by (Trinity College Dublin), Edited by (University College Dublin), Edited by (Royal Irish Academy)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, height x width x depth: 260x210x23 mm, weight: 1021 g, Illustrations
  • Sērija : Irish Historic Towns Atlas
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-May-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Royal Irish Academy
  • ISBN-10: 1908996145
  • ISBN-13: 9781908996145
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 39,11 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 336 pages, height x width x depth: 260x210x23 mm, weight: 1021 g, Illustrations
  • Sērija : Irish Historic Towns Atlas
  • Izdošanas datums: 05-May-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Royal Irish Academy
  • ISBN-10: 1908996145
  • ISBN-13: 9781908996145
This book emerges from the 25 Irish Historic Towns Atlases published to date. It brings together their authors expertise and insights under the guidance of the editor, medieval historian H.B Clarke. With an attractive and highly readable design it explores what is unique about Irish towns and what is generic. Through comparisons it considers various categories of Irish urban life, how Irelands major towns and cities interacted and changed over time and why that might be so. It considers town morphology as a social process in the making of urban Ireland and its distinct personality. The book comprises 20 individual essays that offer new perspectives on urban life in Ireland. In the first section, pairs of comparable towns, and in one case three towns, are explored - Armagh and Kells, Kilkenny and Limerick, Kildare and Tuam, Ennis and Longford, Belfast and Derry~Londonderry, Athlone, Longford and Mullingar. The second section focuses on aspects of urban life such as religion, manufacturing and education. In the final section, three critiques open further ground, suggesting various approaches and tools for understanding towns and their history, shape and diversity. Maps and Texts broadens the ways in which atlases might be used, making it suitable for second level students as well as for more focused scholars. The book is in full colour and illustrated with over 90 maps, reconstructions, views and photographs.

Editors: H.B. Clarke, Sarah Gearty Series editors: Anngret Simms, H.B. Clarke, Raymond Gillespie, Jacinta Prunty; Consultant editor: J.H. Andrews; Cartographic editor: Sarah Gearty; Editorial assistants: Angela Murphy, Jennifer Moore.
Preface vii
IHTA editorial team, authors and publications ix
Figures
xi
Tables
xiii
Foreword: the first ten years J.H. Andrews xv
Part I Introduction
1 Multi-dimensionality
3(16)
H.B. Clarke
Sarah Gearty
Part II Comparing towns
2 Armagh and Kells
19(19)
Patrick J. Duffy
3 Kilkenny and Limerick
38(20)
Jennifer Moore
4 Kildare and Tuam
58(10)
Paul Gosling
5 Ennis and Longford
68(18)
Brian O. Dalaigh
6 Belfast and Derry-Londonderry
86(14)
Raymond Gillespie
7 Athlone, Longford and Mullingar
100(19)
Fergus O'Ferrall
Part III Topographical themes
8 Religion
119(21)
Jacinta Prunty
9 Defence
140(12)
Harman Murtagh
10 Administration
152(12)
Mark Hennessy
11 Manufacturing
164(19)
Stephen A. Royle
12 Trades and services
183(14)
Colm Lennon
13 Transport
197(13)
Arnold Horner
14 Health
210(16)
Eamon O'Flaherty
15 Education
226(10)
Anngret Simms
16 Entertainment, memorials and societies
236(21)
Angela Byrne
Part IV Critiques and methodologies
17 Beyond the fascicles: spatial form and social process
257(9)
Brian Graham
18 Being-in-the-town, being-in-the-atlas: some reflections on capturing the experiences of town dwelling in the historic past
266(12)
Tadhg O'Keeffe
19 Mapping futures? Digitisation, spatial technologies and historic town atlases
278(19)
Keith D. Lilley
Part V Conclusion
20 Maps and texts in comparative dimensions
297(5)
H.B. Clarke
Sarah Gearty
Appendix: List of reviews and articles on IHTA publications 302(5)
Index 307
Sarah Gearty is cartographic and managing editor of the Irish Historic Towns Atlas project. She has overseen the production of over 15 town atlases and several ancillary publications/projects. She was co-author on the atlas of Longford (2010, with Fergus O'Ferrall and Martin Morris) and co-editor of Maps and texts: using the Irish Historic Towns Atlas (with H.B. Clarke, 2013). H.B. Clarke is a medieval historian and a member of the Irish Historic Towns Atlas Editorial Board.