Dublin: The Making of a Capital City

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Dublin: The Making of a Capital City
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Dr David Dickson
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:736
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 153
Category/GenreLocal history
ISBN/Barcode 9781861975867
ClassificationsDewey:941.835
Audience
General
Edition Main

Publishing Details

Publisher Profile Books Ltd
Imprint Profile Books Ltd
Publication Date 6 August 2015
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Dublin has many histories: for a thousand years a modest urban settlement on the quiet waters of the Irish Sea, for the last four hundred it has experienced great - and often astonishing - change. Once a fulcrum of English power in Ireland, it was also the location for the 1916 insurrection that began the rapid imperial retreat. That moment provided Joyce with the setting for the greatest modernist novel of the age, Ulysses, capping a cultural heritage which became an economic resource for the brash 'Tiger Town' of the 1990s. David Dickson's magisterial survey of the city's history brings Dublin to life from its medieval incarnation through the glamorous eighteenth century, when it reigned as the 'Naples of the North', through to the millennium. He reassesses 120 years of Anglo-Irish Union, in which Dublin - while economic capital of Ireland - remained, as it does today, a place in which rival creeds and politics struggled for supremacy. Dublin reveals the rich and intriguing story behind the making of a capital city.

Author Biography

David Dickson is Professor in Modern History at Trinity College, Dublin and has published extensively on the social, economic and cultural history of Ireland. He was elected a Member of the Royal Irish Academy in 2006.

Reviews

He distils a mountain of scholarship to illuminate the whole of Dublin's history. He is strongest on political and social change, informative too on the city's marvellous architecture ... This is the fullest overview of the many transformations of one of the world's most enchanting cities. * The Times * A scholarly, encyclopaedic exploration of our capital city ... highly readable ... a magnificent work of scholarship ... Novelists, historians and general readers will plunder this cornucopia for years to come. * Irish Times * This is narrative history of a high order, supported by impressive scholarship. * Sunday Business Post * This new account has 'classic' written all over it. A handsome, well-indexed and copiously illustrated volume. * BBC History Magazine * Dickson's Dublin is an achievement: he synthesises a vast body of literature to create a work that is comprehensive, intriguing and sober in its judgments ... Dickson has woven together the city's social, economic, cultural, demographic and architectural histories; the story he tells will intrigue natives, enlighten newcomers and stand as a monument to this great city's place in an ever-changing Ireland. -- John Gallagher * Sunday Telegraph * Majestic ... Dublin wears its years of study and learning without affectation, in language that's accessible and more than occasionally deliciously barbed with irony. -- Tommy Barker * Irish Examiner *