|
| |
| | Patrick Pearse - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Pearse was 36 years old at the time of his death. |  | | Early in 1914, Pearse became a member of the secret Irish Republican Brotherhood, an organisation dedicated to the overthrow of British rule in Ireland and its replacement with a Republic. |  | | However, with the outbreak of conflict in Northern Ireland in 1969, Pearse's legacy soon became associated with the Provisional IRA. |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Pearse
(1598 words)
|
|
| |
| | New Page 1 |
 | | Pearse's maverick stance endeared him neither to Sinn Fiin or the republican movement; the Bill, in his view, would allow the Gaelic nationalists at least the removal of one of their manacles. |  | | Patrick and his younger brother, Willie, were together educated at the Christian Brothers School, Westland Row, where Patrick received his first classes in Irish; this became his focal interest. |  | | Born to James Pearse, an English stonecarver who found first work and later a new faith as an artisan embellishing Catholic edifices in Dublin, and Margaret Brady, whose family had fled the famine in Co. Meath and eked out a living in the same city, Patrick was the second of four children. |
|
http://www.giveirelandbacktotheirish.com/pearse.htm
(1505 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Pearse |
 | | In death, Patrick Pearse was known as the "First President of Ireland" and Irish history and culture became part of the educational system after 1922. |  | | Regardless of his law training, Patrick Pearse was more interested in what he was learning about Ireland as a nation. |  | | In 1914, he was sent on a fund-raising tour of America by Clan-na-Gael, an organisation that aided the Irish Republican Brotherhood. |
|
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/patrick_pearse.htm
(1444 words)
|
|
| |
| | Ireland first! - Patrick Pearse - About his life. |
 | | In July 1914, Pearse was made a member of the Supreme Council of the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB), a separate militant group that believed in using force to throw the British out of Ireland. |  | | The leaders on the Supreme Council opposed an insurrection while the military council was secretly planning one. |  | | Above the Post Office, the Union Jack of England was hauled down, and the tricolor of Ireland raised. |
|
http://www.eirefirst.com/pearse2.htm
(1886 words)
|
|
| |
| | Without a title - Title |
 | | Pearse at thirty-seven years of age was the newly declared President of that imagined State and Commander-in-Chief of the five hundred-odd men, women and schoolboys who in the following seven days took on the might of the British Empire. |  | | He went on to all but banish James Pearse from his autobiography, introducing him with the single sentence "My father was an Englishman" and implying that he remained such by stating that only "through his children was his name to become an Irish name" (Autobiography 9). |  | | I argue that Patrick Pearse's entire life was devoted to separating two entities, that is, to prising apart a dominating masculine England from a feminine and subordinate Ireland. |
|
http://www-mcnair.berkeley.edu/96journal/nugent.html
(4545 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Pearce |
 | | Patrick Pearse was sentenced to death by shooting. |  | | I have seen him several times going through the city with bodies of men and acting as an officer. |  | | In a memorandum sent by General Sir John Maxwell to the then British Prime Minister, Herbet Asquith, the following description was provided for Patrick Pearse: |
|
http://www.stephen-stratford.co.uk/patrick_pearse.htm
(659 words)
|
|
| |
| | Who is Padraig Pearse? |
 | | Pearse went on to earn a BA in modern languages at University College in Dublin and a Law degree from Royal Univ. He never really practiced law though his one case involved the defense of the use of Irish language advertisements on horsedrawn carts. |  | | Pearse grew up in Dublin where he was schooled at the Christian Brothers School, Westland Row. |  | | Padraig Pearse's father James was an Englishman from Devonshire and was a skilled stonecarver. |
|
http://detroit-pearse.com/padraig_pearse.html
(1185 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Henry Pearse -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Deval Laurdine Patrick was born in Chicago to Emily and Pat Patrick. |  | | Fearless and eloquent, Patrick Henry became the spokesman of the Southern colonies during the stirring period that led to the American Revolution. |  | | The Australian novelist Patrick White observed his country as it went through the volatile process of growth and self-definition. |
|
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9058883
(751 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Pearse - Hero of 1916 |
 | | Their school prospered and in 1910 they moved it to The Hermitage, Rathfarnham, where Robert Emmett had courted Sarah Curran. |  | | Within days, in closed trials before courts made up of three British officers in which the defendants had no lawyers and were allowed to call no witnesses, they found every defendant guilty and condemned them to death. |  | | When Patrick Pearse heard the sentence, there in his cell in Kilmainham jail, where Napper Tandy, |
|
http://www.thewildgeese.com/pages/pearse.html
(2715 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Henry Pearse Biography / Biography of Patrick Henry Pearse Biography |
 | | Moran, Sean Farrell, Patrick Pearse and the politics of redemption: the mind of the Easter Rising, 1916, Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 1994. |  | | The Irish poet, educator, and revolutionary nationalist Patrick Henry Pearse (1879-1916) was a leader of the Easter Rising of 1916 against the British. |  | | Murphy, Brian P., Patrick Pearse and the lost republican ideal, Dublin: James Duffy, 1991. |
|
http://www.bookrags.com/biography-patrick-henry-pearse
(648 words)
|
|
| |
| | SEARC'S WEB GUIDE - Padraig Pearse (1879-1916) |
 | | Pearse was a member of the Supreme Council of the IRB and was central to the organisation of the 1916 Rising. |  | | Pearse was a proponent of Home Rule prior to 1912 but in 1913 he joined the IRB and travelled to America where he lectured on Irish literature and education to raise funds for his schools. |  | | Padraig Pearse was born in Dublin and educated at the Royal University where he studied Law and Irish before being called to the Bar in Dublin. |
|
http://www.searcs-web.com/pearse.html
(891 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick H. Pearse |
 | | At the time of his death in 1916 he was Commander in Chief of the Irish Volunteer Army and President of the Provisional Government of Ireland. |  | | After his execution the President of the Courts Martial which had condemned Pearse to death said: |  | | Schools should be free from the tyranny of programmes which are centrally formulated and locally imposed. |
|
http://www.ul.ie/~philos/vol1/pearse.html
(3241 words)
|
|
| |
| | Pádraic Henry Pearse (1879-1916) |
 | | Padraic Pearse's father was from England and his mother was from County Meath. |  | | Pádraic was born in Dublin, received his education from the Chrisitian Brothers in Westland Row, and completed a degree in Arts and Law at the Royal University in 1901. |  | | Pearse was recruited into the IRB in 1912 and later became a member of the Military Council of the organisation. |
|
http://indigo.ie/~1916/pic_pearse.html
(251 words)
|
|
| |
| | Famous Irish Lives - Patrick Pearse |
 | | He became president of the provisional government and commander-in-chief of the republican army. |  | | In 1910, he moved to larger premises at The Hermitage, Rathfarnham, where Robert Emmet had courted Sarah Curran; his first school became St Ita's, for girls, but financial problems forced its closure. |  | | His father was an English stonemason, his mother came from Co Meath. |
|
http://www.irelandseye.com/irish/people/famous/pearse.shtm
(359 words)
|
|
| |
| | PEARSE, Patrick Henry (Pádraig Mac Piarais) |
 | | In early 1916 Pearse, Tom Clarke, and several other leaders of the Irish Republican Brotherhood planned the Easter Rising against British government. |  | | Home: Nations: Ireland: Heads of State: PEARSE, Patrick Henry |  | | The son of an English sculptor and his Irish wife, Patrick Pearse was educated as lawyer at the Royal University of Ireland. |
|
http://www.archontology.org/nations/eire/eire_rep1/pearse.php
(295 words)
|
|
| |
| | Little Lad of the Tricks |
 | | Sean Farrell Moran, Patrick Pearse and the politics of redemption: the mind of the Easter rising, 1916 (Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America, 1994). |  | | Translated by Joseph Campbell, introduction by Patrick Browne. |  | | Pádraic Pearse, Political writings and Speeches (Collected works of Pádraic H. Pearse) (Dublin: Phoenix 1916). |
|
http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/E950004-009/E950004-009.html
(1240 words)
|
|
| |
| | Troubled Ireland - Profiles |
 | | Patrick Pearse was born in 1879 and was the son of a catholic and a protestant. |  | | Michael Collins was born in the County Cork in 1890. |  | | After he left school, he trained to be a lawyer, became editor of the leagues newspaper, then started a boys school taught in Gaelic. |
|
http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~erewhon1/ireland/profiles.htm
(958 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Pearse:A Man by Rose Tempany Pearse |
 | | Most secondary schools in Ireland at this time were run by religious organisations such as the Jesuits and the Christian Brothers (such as Westland Row School where Pearse was himself educated, simply because the church had the bottomless pits of money to run at a loss. |  | | Pearse was a man born to be a father, though, without every having, to paraphrase one of his biographers, 'even a mundane love affair in his life', he was destined never to have children of his own. |  | | Pearse's influence over the school, his dynamism, his love for his 'fosterlings' as he called the boys, could not be re-captured afterwards. |
|
http://website.lineone.net/~pearsebaby
(2491 words)
|
|
| |
| | A little Patrick Pearse for St. Paddy's Day! |
 | | A little Patrick Pearse for St. Paddy's Day! |  | | Re: A little Patrick Pearse for St. Paddy's Day! |  | | The 'Hag of Beare' is rendered as 'Clooth-na-Bare' by Yeats, who speculated that she might be the Mother of the Gods. |
|
http://www.poetsforum.com/forum2/forum.pl?read=441
(214 words)
|
|
| |
| | Pearse, Patrick Henry |
 | | Proclaimed president of the provisional government, he was court-martialled and shot after its suppression. |  | | Pearse was a founding member of the Irish Volunteers, and was inducted into the Irish Republican Brotherhood (the Irish wing of the Fenian movement) in 1913. |  | | His life's work was to ensure that the Irish had control over their own education, and that the language of Ireland should be respected and preserved. |
|
http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0012263.html
(254 words)
|
|
| |
| | BBC - History - Wars - 1916 Easter Rising - Profiles - Patrick Pearse |
 | | He was found guilty, sentenced to death and was transferred to Kilmainham Gaol that evening. |  | | Pearse was court-martialled at Richmond Barracks on 2nd May. At his trial he, if anything, exaggerated his role in the Rising, pleading that the lives of the men should be spared and he himself executed. |  | | He wrote to his mother ‘This is the death I should have asked for if God had given me the choice of all deaths’. |
|
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/war/easterrising/profiles/po11.shtml
(647 words)
|
|
| |
| | MSN Encarta - Search Results - Patrick Henry Pearse |
 | | Henry, Patrick (1736-1799), American orator and statesman, and a leading patriot of the American Revolution. |  | | MSN Encarta - Search Results - Patrick Henry Pearse |  | | Search for Magazine Articles on "Patrick Henry Pearse" |
|
http://encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/search.aspx?q=Patrick+Henry+Pearse
(120 words)
|
|
| |
| | [No title] |
 | | Most were merely dreamers like their leader, Patrick Pearse
a seemingly mild-mannered school teacher who fantasized of a free Ireland. |  | | Born Patrick Henry Pearse of an English father and Irish mother in Dublin City on November 10, 1879
at an early age, Pearse and his three siblings were regaled with tales of Ireland’s heroes by an elderly aunt. |  | | Perhaps it was his close ties with Pearse and Plunkett. |
|
http://www.orgsites.com/pa/aoh17/WEOURSELVES.doc
(5871 words)
|
|
| |
| | Ireland first! - Patrick Pearse - Chronology of events in Pearse's Life |
 | | Later taught at Alexandra College, CBS Westland Row and was examiner in Irish history at Clongowes College September 1900: father died, Pearse and his brother Willie left the thriving stone-carving business which was renamed Pearse and Sons |  | | December: swore the oath of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, infiltrated the Irish Volunteers |  | | April 28: issued manifesto, signed as P.H. Pearse Commandant General, Commanding-in-Chief, the Army of the Irish Republic and President of the Provisional Government |
|
http://www.eirefirst.com/pearse3.htm
(568 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Henry Pearse |
 | | He was educated for the law but early in his career made himself part of the Gaelic movement in Ireland. |  | | Pearse, Patrick Henry, 1879–1916, Irish educator and patriot. |  | | Related content from HighBeam Research on: Patrick Henry Pearse |
|
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/history/A0837993.html
(167 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Pearse |
 | | (1) Patrick Pearse, speech at his court-martial (1916) |  | | If your school wishes to copy the site in this way, there is a tariff of charges. |  | | I have helped to organize, to arm, to train, and to discipline my fellow countrymen to the sole end that when the time came, they might fight for Irish freedom. |
|
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/IREpeaseP.htm
(229 words)
|
|
| |
| | The terrible legacy of Patrick Pearse - Irish Independent |
 | | The terrible legacy of Patrick Pearse - Irish Independent |  | | Could you register your details by following the instructions below or login using your email address and password. |  | | Click here to register for Unison's free Internet and E-mail access. |
|
http://www.unison.ie/irish_independent/stories.php3?ti=41&ca=45&si=408814&issue_id=4304
(131 words)
|
|
| |
| | Pearse (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Patrick Pearse (1879-1916), leader of the Irish Easter Rising in 1916 |  | | Pearse Island, an island in western British Columbia, Canada |  | | William Pearse (1881 - 1916), an Irish nationalist and younger brother of Patrick Pearse |
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearse_(disambiguation)
(159 words)
|
|
| |
| | BBC - History - Wars - 1916 Easter Rising - Insurrection - Blood Sacrifice: Patrick Pearse |
 | | Aloysious, O.F.M. Capuchin who gave the last rites of the Catholic Church to Patrick Pearse |  | | The Proclamation they issued when the Rising began stated: ‘In this supreme hour, the Irish people must
by the readiness of its children to sacrifice themselves
prove itself worthy of the august destiny to which it is called’. |  | | Both were traditional republicans — hardheaded, practical, ruthless, committed to the use of force to gain Irish independence, and convinced that war had provided them with a unique opportunity to achieve this goal. |
|
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/war/easterrising/insurrection/in05.shtml
(756 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Pearse' Oration |
 | | Patrick Pearse's Graveside Panegyric for O'Donovan Rossa on 1 August 1915 at Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin |  | | Deliberately here we avow ourselves, as he avowed himself in the dock, Irishmen of one allegiance only. |
|
http://www.irishroots.org/aoh/oration.htm
(511 words)
|
|
| |
| | Pádraig Mac Piarais |
 | | 'Pearse Patrick (or Padraic) (1879-1916)' in A Library of Literary Criticism Modern Irish Literature, Ungar, New York, (1988) 536-544. |  | | 'Patrick H. Pearse, Conteur' in Études Irlandaises 10 (Dec. 1985) 53-66. |  | | The translations 'Ideal' and 'Lullaby of the Woman of the Mountain' by Thomas Mac Donagh are published in Hoagland, Kathleen (ed.), 1000 Years of Irish Poetry, The Devin Adair Company, New York 1947 and 1953 and The Universal Library, Grosset and Dunlap, New York (1962) 240-41. |
|
http://sulacco.library.ucg.ie/bibltran/authors/Mac_Piarais_Padraig.htm
(689 words)
|
|
| |
| | Pearse, Patrick Henry - definition of Pearse, Patrick Henry by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. |
 | | Pearse, Patrick Henry is not available in the general English dictionary and thesaurus. |  | | Pearse, Patrick Henry - definition of Pearse, Patrick Henry by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. |  | | This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. |
|
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Pearse,+Patrick+Henry
(90 words)
|
|
| |
| | Teach an Phiarsaigh (Patrick Pearse's Cottage) Ros Muc County Galway - Irish Historic and Tourist Sites - 1 2 Travel ... |
 | | A small restored cottage used by Patrick Pearse (1879 - 1916) leader of the 1916 Rising, as a summer residence. |  | | The interior, although burned during the War of Independence, has been reconstructed and contains an exhibition and a number of mementoes of Pearse. |  | | Teach an Phiarsaigh (Patrick Pearse's Cottage) Ros Muc County Galway - Irish Historic and Tourist Sites - 1 2 Travel Ireland Regional Information Guide |
|
http://www.12travel.com/ie/attractions/pearsescottage.html
(105 words)
|
|
| |
| | Brian Gordan Sinclair - Easter Rising (sinclair.wellsoc.org) |
 | | EASTER RISING presents a day by day account of one of Ireland's greatest historical events as told, for the first time, by Patrick Pearse himself. |  | | Amazingly, no one, until now, had ever written a play detailing this adventure, much less presenting it from the viewpoint of Patrick H. Pearse.....poet, lawyer, visionary, educationalist, and rebel. |  | | This two CD set contains all three acts of the premiere stage production while maintaining the artistic integrity and emotional power of the original. |
|
http://sinclair.wellsoc.org/EasterRising.htm
(639 words)
|
|
| |
| | Pearse and âO Buachalla (1979) The literary writings of Patrick Pearse: Writings in English |
 | | The literary writings of Patrick Pearse: Writings in English |  | | Pearse and âO Buachalla (1979) The literary writings of Patrick Pearse: Writings in English |  | | To view the the latter's ratings, click on Chapters/Papers/Articles in the STATISTICS box, select a publication from the list that appears, and then click on either Quality or Interest in that publication's STATISTICS box. |
|
http://www.getcited.org/?PUB=102109317&showStat=Ratings
(88 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Pearse |
 | | It is a biographical essay focusing on that part of Patrick Pearse's life which was primarily concerned with educational theory. |  | | There is little or no new information in the essay, but it is a useful digest of lengthier works, many of which are listed in the bibliography. |  | | A simple, one page site, with no web design features. |
|
http://www.pearsecom.com/1916/pearsemurphyreview.htm
(65 words)
|
|
| |
| | Patrick Henry Pearse quotes |
 | | Authors > P Pat > Patrick Henry Pearse |  | | Add the "Dynamic Daily Quotation" to Your Site or Blog - it's Easy! |
|
http://en.thinkexist.com/quotes/patrick_henry_pearse
(70 words)
|
|
|