This month as part of our Connolly Archive, we begin a new serialisation of one of Connolly’s famous works, his pamphlet The Re-Conquest of Ireland, published 110 years ago at . . .
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to the final chapter, ‘The Working Class: The inheritors of the Irish ideals of the past - The repository of the hopes of the future.’
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to Chapter Fifteen, ‘Some more Irish pioneers of the socialist movement’.
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to Chapter Fourteen, ‘Socialistic teachings of the Young Irelanders; the thinkers and the workers’.
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to Chapter Thirteen, ‘Our Irish Girondins sacrifice the Irish peasantry upon the altar of private property’.
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to Chapter Twelve ‘A Chapter of Horrors: Daniel O’Connell and the working class’.
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to Chapter Eleven, ‘An Irish Utopia’.
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to Chapter Ten, ‘The first Irish socialist, a forerunner of Marx’.
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to Chapter Nine, ‘The Emmet Conspiracy’.
In this month’s Connolly Archive, we continue on with our serialisation of Connolly’s Labour in Irish History, moving on to Chapter Eight, ‘United Irishmen as Democrats and Internationalists’.