- IE IJA J/10/101
- Item
- 8 March 1956
Part of Irish Jesuits
Letter from publishers the Clarendon Press, Oxford to Fr Aubrey Gwynn SJ on his proposed book on the history of the early Irish Church.
Part of Irish Jesuits
Letter from publishers the Clarendon Press, Oxford to Fr Aubrey Gwynn SJ on his proposed book on the history of the early Irish Church.
The Irish church in the eleventh and twelfth centuries
The Irish church in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Edited by Gerard O'Brien. Four Courts Press, Blackrock, Kill Lane, Co. Dublin.
Gwynn, Aubrey, 1892-1983, Jesuit priest and academic
Part of Irish Jesuits
Draft chapters by Fr Aubrey Gwynn SJ of the book he was working on before he died 'The Irish Church in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries'. Incomplete – first three chapters are missing. Includes:
Medieval Studies presented to Aubrey Gwynn, S.J.
Medieval Studies presented to Aubrey Gwynn, S.J. Edited by J.A. Watt, J.B. Morrall, F.X. Martin. [With plates, including a portrait, and a bibliography of Gwynn's work's]
Colm O Lochlainn, Dublin, 1961.
With editors signature on inside page.
Part of Irish Jesuits
Fr Aubrey Gwynn’s Bible, with entries in his handwriting in the ‘Family Register’ of the dates on which his mother and siblings were received into the Catholic Church; dates of family marriages and deaths and the dates on which he took his first vows and was ordained.
Gwynn, Aubrey, 1892-1983, Jesuit priest and academic
Part of Irish Jesuits
Letter to Fr Aubrey Gwynn SJ from publishers the Clarendon Press, Oxford, concerning Russell & Russell’s reissuing of 'Roman Education'. ‘As he says in his letter of 29 January 1964 a loophole in the Unites States copyright law enables books published here (UK) before 1957 to be reprinted there (US) without authorisation – though not to be exported into countries where this loophole doesn’t exist. Naturally he didn’t say that practically all American publishers regard it as unethical to take advantage of this loophole, for various reasons, and especially because it is liable to create the situation in which we now find ourselves.’