Thesis defence Navigating Revolutions and Restorations The Irish Colleges in Paris and Rome between 1772 and 1849 Add to calendar 2024-01-22 15:00 2024-01-22 17:00 Europe/Rome Navigating Revolutions and Restorations Sala dei Levrieri and Zoom YYYY-MM-DD Print Share: Share on Facebook Share on BlueSky Share on X Share on LinkedIn Send by email Scheduled dates Jan 22 2024 15:00 - 17:00 CET Sala dei Levrieri and Zoom, Organised by Department of History PhD thesis defence by Muireann McCann Scholarship on the Irish in Europe has flourished in recent decades and studies examining the network(s) of Irish Catholic continental colleges and their members have formed a significant part of this. However, much of the existing literature focuses on the early modern period, while the nineteenth century has been comparatively neglected. While patterns of Irish migration began to shift in the eighteenth century and legislation previously imposed on Catholics and dissenting Protestants in Ireland was gradually repealed, this thesis shows that these institutions and their residents remained important nodes connecting Irish people and continental Europe.Drawing on material from a mixture of state, church and newspaper archives in Paris, Rome and Ireland, this thesis builds on earlier literature and constructs a fuller analysis of the two Irish Colleges during the first half of the nineteenth century. It highlights the connections and disconnections within and between the Colleges, as well as with their host cities, the broader Irish community in Europe and, of course, with Ireland itself. These relationships could be shaped—indeed in some cases strained—by the revolutions, regime changes and wars that punctuated the period, and also by political, social and economic developments back in Ireland. As Catholic institutions, the Colleges were frequently impacted by changing relations between the church and the state. Moreover, as Irish institutions composed of subjects of Britain, shifting relations between states, whether France and Britain, Britain and the Papal States or the Papal States and France, were also significant.