Introduction: honour in Britain and Ireland; 1. The honour revolution of 1541; 2. Gaelic honour in Tudor Ireland; 3. 'British' honour and the Nine Years' War; 4. Making the Irish European: Gaelic honour after the Nine Years' War; 5. Gaelic and Old English honour in early Stuart 'Britain'; 6. A hierarchy transformed? Precedence disputes, the defence of honour and 'British' high-politics, 1603–32; 7. Wentworth, the Irish Lord Deputyship and the Caroline politics of honour; Conclusion.
Exploring early modern concepts of honour, this book brings a cultural perspective to our understanding of English imperialism in Ireland.
Brendan Kane is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Connecticut, Storrs.
'… a rich and scholarly study of the role of honor in political and
cultural contexts in Britain and Ireland … In this book, Brendan
Kane has displayed sparkling enthusiasm for the subject at hand,
making it entirely accessible to both a specialist and
nonspecialist audience, through a skilfully written narrative.
These factors, combined with its undoubted contribution to the
historiography, make this book worthy of widespread attention.'
Annaleigh Margey, Renaissance Quarterly
'Kane's erudite book challenges those Irish historians who would
reduce all political action to the pursuit of material
self-interest … a valuable and rewarding study, good to think with,
and, as such, will be vital reading for all students of early
modern Ireland.' Ian Campbell, Irish Historical Studies
'In a densely detailed, thorough examination … Kane skilfully
guides the reader through the myriad personalities, policies, and
perceptions of not simply theoretical ideas of honor, but also how
ever-present honor was and how it functioned in Gael-Gall relations
… Kane has produced a text that will be richly mined by both
students and scholars in the field for years to come.' Kelle
Lynch-Baldwin, Sixteenth Century Journal
'Kane makes perceptive and resourceful use of literary sources to
illuminate his theme. He draws out the extraordinarily important
role that honour politics played in shaping the values and identity
of the British and Irish elites during this period, and by
recovering their obsession with honour he is able to construct a
sophisticated cultural history of high politics.' David Smith,
Historical Journal
'… this is a rich and suggestive book that correctly alerts
historians of early modern Ireland to the need for greater
awareness of cultural issues when they seek to explain the
transformations wrought on that island during the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries.' James Kelly, American Historical Review
'… an impressively detailed and well researched book with a
persuasive and coherent central argument … excellent.' Andrew
Hopper, Journal of Early Modern History
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