Law and religion in Ireland, 1700-1970
In: Palgrave Modern Legal History
In: Springer eBook Collection
Chapter 1: The Legal History of Religion in Ireland -- Chapter 2: The Penal Laws: Origins, Purpose, Enforcement and Impact -- Chapter 3: To "Elude the Design and Intention" of the Penal Laws: Collusion and Discovery in Eighteenth-Century Ireland: A Case Study -- Chapter 4: Repealing the Penal Laws, 1760-95 -- Chapter 5: "Inoperative But Insulting:" Residues of the Penal Laws, 1829-1920 -- Chapter 6: The Legal and Constitutional Organization of the Catholic Church in Nineteenth Century Ireland -- Chapter 7: Irish Presbyterians and the Quest for Toleration, c.1692–1733 -- Chapter 8: "I Am Friends Wt You & Do Entertain No Malice": Discord, Disputes and Defamation in Ulster Presbyterian Church Courts, c. 1700-1838 -- Chapter 9: Church Briefs And Charitable Relief: Reparations For Two Early 18th Century Fire-Damaged Ulster Towns -- Chapter 10: The Disestablishment of the Church of Ireland -- Chapter 11: Disendowment Under The Irish Church Act 1869 -- Chapter 12: The Constitution of the Church of Ireland in Action: Ritualist Litigation in a Disestablished Church 1871-1937 -- Chapter 13: Religion and the Constitution of the Irish Free State -- Chapter 14: Article 44.1 and the "Special Position" of the Catholic Church in the Irish Constitution, 1937 – 1972.