Events in the ' Rebel County' of Cork have played a central role in popular memory and historiography of the Irish Revolution. The county contributes some of the most prominent aspects of the Revolution's central narrative: the figure of Clonakilty's Michael Collins and his death at Bé al na Blá th; the murder of Tomá s Mac Curtain; the hunger strike and death of Terence MacSwiney; and the actions of Tom Barry's West Cork ' Flying Column' . This book takes a new approach to understanding conflict in Cork through analysis of patterns of death, spatially and chronologically, during the conflicts of 1912- 23. It also analyses in new ways the scale and nature of the Cork IRA's operations during the War of Independence, and both IRA and National Army activities during the Civil War. In so doing, it suggests that some past work has been overly focused on violence in West Cork, especially a few specific incidents. It argues that, overall, West Cork was no more violent than the rest of the county; indeed, the bulk of deaths and operations took place in the area covered by the IRA's Cork 1 Brigade centred on Cork City.