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  1. Maud Gonne is part of Irish history: her founding of the Daughters of Ireland, in 1900, was the key that effectively opened the door of twentieth-century politics to Irish women. Still remembered in Ireland for the inspiring public speeches she made on behalf of the suffering—those evicted from their homes in western Ireland, the Treason-Felony prisoners on the Isle of Wright, indeed all ...

  2. 11 de abr. de 2016 · 100 Jahre nach dem Oster-Aufstand, dem Fanal der irischen Unabhängigkeit, ist Maud Gonne noch immer eine Ikone des geistigen und militanten Widerstands. Elsemarie Maletzke erzählt anschaulich und unterhaltsam, wie aus der schönen Offizierstochter eine Revolutionärin und Irlands »heilige Johanna« wurde.

  3. 2 de jun. de 2019 · Gonne was a celebrity after all - a wealthy Irish beauty and political rabblement rouser. Her affair with Millevoye didn’t exactly escape their “corridor gossip,” as Gonne called it. The best known among Maud Gonne’s suitors is, of course, William Butler Yeats, whom Gonne and her daughter Iseult referred to as “Poor Willie.”

  4. Maud Gonne was an Irish nationalist who made various links with the Indian independence movement. She had an extremely close relationship with W. B. Yeats throughout her life, was the mother of Iseult Gonne and knew Rabindranath Tagore, but also had a separate public political life.

  5. 31 de jan. de 2015 · Maud Gonne brought up the child as her own, but their relationship was always odd. Later she refused to call her "daughter" in company, instead describing her as a "kinswoman" or "cousin".

  6. 28 de mai. de 2021 · Bendheim’s fascination with Maud Gonne (1866-1953) dates back to 1993 when she reviewed a collection of Gonne-Yeats letters. She “became seduced not, as one might expect, by the great poet’s few surviving letters to her, but by Maud’s voice on the page.”

  7. Books. Maud Gonne's Irish Nationalist Writings, 1895-1946. This collection of the political writings of Maud Gonne broadens our understanding of female activism during the foundation of the Irish state. It appreciates the intellectual work of someone too often seen as a beautiful adjunct to famous men: as the muse and unrequited love of W B ...