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  1. Bulmer Hobson Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2002), Letters, Volume 10. Sir,—In his informative contribution, ‘Bulmer Hobson, “the mostdangerous man in Ireland”’ (HI 10.1, Spring 2002), Des Gunning mentionsthe peculiar fact that Hobson ‘has failed to attract the attention of aserious biographer’.

  2. Bulmer Hobson (comtat de Tyrone, 1882 - 1969) fou un periodista i socialista irlandès dels principals dirigents dels Voluntaris Irlandesos, membre de la Germandat Republicana Irlandesa i força relacionat amb James Connolly.

  3. Bulmer Hobson…‘the most dangerous man in Ireland’ Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 1 (Spring 2002), News, Volume 10. Remarkably, for a figure who has failed to attract the attention of a serious biographer, there is hardly a volume on any aspect of early twentieth-century history in which Bulmer Hobson’s name does not figure as a footnote.

  4. Bulmer Hobson Marnie Hay Bulmer Hobson was an ubiquitous leader and propagandist within the advanced nationalist movement in Ireland in the early twentieth century. He has the dubious distinction of having been held against his will by his comrades in the Irish Republic Brotherhood (IRB) from the afternoon of

  5. Bulmer Hobson 1905-1907: Mazzini’s Ulster Disciple. Bulmer Hobson and Giuseppe Mazzini were republican nationalists, one Irish, one Italian. Hobson was part of Sinn Fein’s Irish independence movement in the early twentieth century, while Mazzini was at the heart of the Italian Risorgimento

  6. The nineteenth-century Italian nationalist, Giuseppe Mazzini had a profound influence on the early career of the twentieth-century Irish nationalist, Bulmer Hobson. Yet few, if any, have noticed it. This paper uncovers Mazzini's influence on

  7. BULMER HOBSON, THE IRB AND THE 1916 EASTER RlSING The kidnapping of nationalist leader Bulmer Hobson is one of the more intriguing sideshows of the Easter Rising of 24-29 April 1916. The Military Council of the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB)1 was responsible for planning and leading the week-long rebellion against British rule in Ireland.