Bibliography

F. X.
Martin

17 publications between 1961 and 2005 indexed
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Works authored

Moody, T. W., F. X. Martin, and F. J. Byrne [eds.], A new history of Ireland, vol. 9: Maps, genealogies, lists: a companion to Irish history, part II, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984.
Moody, T. W., F. X. Martin, and F. J. Byrne [eds.], A new history of Ireland, vol. 8: A chronology of Irish history to 1976: a companion to Irish history, part I, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1982.
Scott, A. B., and F. X. Martin, Giraldus Cambrensis. Expugnatio Hibernica: The conquest of Ireland, Dublin: Royal Irish Academy, 1978.

Works edited

Moody, T. W., F. X. Martin, and Francis J. Byrne (eds), A new history of Ireland, vol. 3: Early modern Ireland, 1534–1691, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1976.
Moody, T. W., and F. X. Martin (eds), The course of Irish history, Cork: Cork University Press, 1967.
Watt, J. A., J. B. Morrall, and F. X. Martin (eds), Medieval studies presented to Aubrey Gwynn, S. J., Dublin: The Three Candles, 1961.

Contributions to journals

Martin, F. X., “Theodore William Moody”, Hermathena 136 (Summer, 1984): 5–7.
Martin, F. X., “The 1916 rising: A ‘coup d'état’ or a ‘bloody protest’?”, Studia Hibernica 8 (1968): 106–137.

Contributions to edited collections or authored works

Martin, F. X., “Eoin MacNeill (1867–1945): Glensman, language revivalist and state builder”, in: Eamon Phoenix, Pádraic Ó Cléireacháin, Eileen McAuley, and Nuala McSparran (eds), Feis na nGleann: a century of Gaelic culture in the Antrim Glens, Belfast: Feis na nGleann, Stair Uladh, 2005. 87–94.
Martin, F. X., “Allies and an overlord, 1169–72”, in: Art Cosgrove (ed.), A new history of Ireland, vol. 2: Medieval Ireland, 1169–1534, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press, 1987. 67–97.
Martin, F. X., “Diarmait Mac Murchada and the coming of the Anglo-Normans”, in: Art Cosgrove (ed.), A new history of Ireland, vol. 2: Medieval Ireland, 1169–1534, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press, 1987. 43–66.
Martin, F. X., “Introduction”, in: Art Cosgrove (ed.), A new history of Ireland, vol. 2: Medieval Ireland, 1169–1534, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press, 1987. xlix–lxii.
Martin, F. X., “John, lord of Ireland, 1185–1216”, in: Art Cosgrove (ed.), A new history of Ireland, vol. 2: Medieval Ireland, 1169–1534, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press, 1987. 127–155.  
abstract:
This chapter discusses the following: continuity of royal policy; advances in north Munster from 1185; the O'Brien–MacCarthy feud; Limerick becomes pan of the Anglo-Norman system; conflict among the O'Connors; William de Burgh in Connacht; John recognizes Cathal Crobderg as tributary king of Connacht, December 1205; John and Ireland, 1204–10; administrative, legal, and fiscal consolidation; issue of charters; rise and fall of John de Courcy; William de Braose and William Marshal; John de Grey succeeds Meiler fitz Henry as justiciar, June 1208; de Braose flees to Ireland; John's preparations for an expedition to Ireland: affairs in Scotland, Wales, and England, 1209; the expedition sails, June 1210; de Braose submits; John's success in Ireland, June–August 1210; a centralized administration; Athlone as the Anglo-Norman gate to the north and west; de Grey's failure to control Ulster; the barons in Ireland support John, October 1212; John agrees with the papacy and defeats the French, May 1213; Geoffrey de Marisco and Henry of London as royal governors; William Marshal: prospects of developing Ireland; Death of John; Magna Carta issued for Ireland, 1216–17; Henry of London, the papacy, and the new English policy for Ireland 1216–17; Honorius III forbids discrimination against Irish clergy, 1220; and the ‘conspiracy of Mellifont’, 1216–31: a conflict of cultures.
(source: Oxford Scholarship Online)
abstract:
This chapter discusses the following: continuity of royal policy; advances in north Munster from 1185; the O'Brien–MacCarthy feud; Limerick becomes pan of the Anglo-Norman system; conflict among the O'Connors; William de Burgh in Connacht; John recognizes Cathal Crobderg as tributary king of Connacht, December 1205; John and Ireland, 1204–10; administrative, legal, and fiscal consolidation; issue of charters; rise and fall of John de Courcy; William de Braose and William Marshal; John de Grey succeeds Meiler fitz Henry as justiciar, June 1208; de Braose flees to Ireland; John's preparations for an expedition to Ireland: affairs in Scotland, Wales, and England, 1209; the expedition sails, June 1210; de Braose submits; John's success in Ireland, June–August 1210; a centralized administration; Athlone as the Anglo-Norman gate to the north and west; de Grey's failure to control Ulster; the barons in Ireland support John, October 1212; John agrees with the papacy and defeats the French, May 1213; Geoffrey de Marisco and Henry of London as royal governors; William Marshal: prospects of developing Ireland; Death of John; Magna Carta issued for Ireland, 1216–17; Henry of London, the papacy, and the new English policy for Ireland 1216–17; Honorius III forbids discrimination against Irish clergy, 1220; and the ‘conspiracy of Mellifont’, 1216–31: a conflict of cultures.
(source: Oxford Scholarship Online)
Martin, F. X., “Overlord becomes feudal lord, 1172–85”, in: Art Cosgrove (ed.), A new history of Ireland, vol. 2: Medieval Ireland, 1169–1534, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press, 1987. 98–126.
Moody, T. W., and F. X. Martin, “A chronology of Irish history”, in: T. W. Moody, and F. X. Martin (eds), The course of Irish history, Cork: Cork University Press, 1967. 396–437.
Moody, T. W., and F. X. Martin, “A bibliography of Irish history”, in: T. W. Moody, and F. X. Martin (eds), The course of Irish history, Cork: Cork University Press, 1967. 350–395.
Martin, F. X., “The Normans: arrival and settlement: 1169-c.1300”, in: T. W. Moody, and F. X. Martin (eds), The course of Irish history, Cork: Cork University Press, 1967. 95–112.

As honouree

Bradley, John (ed.), Settlement and society in medieval Ireland: studies presented to F. X. Martin, O.S.A., Kilkenny: Boethius Press, 1988.

As honouree

Bradley, John (ed.), Settlement and society in medieval Ireland: studies presented to F. X. Martin, O.S.A., Kilkenny: Boethius Press, 1988..