Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations
![A complete backup of https://healthmasters.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/24d6d506-b061-4d09-afc1-04beab1f0da5.png)
A complete backup of https://healthmasters.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://socialmedicine.info](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/24c71089-a806-463a-abc6-f7dafa9501be.png)
A complete backup of https://socialmedicine.info
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://opencampus.net](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/d16c6935-5c69-4bbc-8988-986b9d17fdb5.png)
A complete backup of https://opencampus.net
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://rueconomist.ru](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/a100f37f-dd13-4fe5-9739-c6446663f340.png)
A complete backup of https://rueconomist.ru
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://ecreamery.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/1641dc05-9618-4485-a50f-92dfa2feefd5.png)
A complete backup of https://ecreamery.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://fundacion-antama.org](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/985ccb34-23c2-4c0a-8951-a52cd8ff1115.png)
A complete backup of https://fundacion-antama.org
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://theschwartzcenter.org](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/737c24ec-7a29-48f6-8d99-daebf42adf91.png)
A complete backup of https://theschwartzcenter.org
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://flukebiomedical.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/cdf16ce3-cd82-454c-bbfb-59573a0ffcb7.png)
A complete backup of https://flukebiomedical.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://analogindustries.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/c46717b5-abfd-4b18-9ea3-5ab599f9eb52.png)
A complete backup of https://analogindustries.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of https://factorie.com.au](https://www.archivebay.com/archive6/images/4ba0b317-0d89-4c8f-bfb4-7ed709bd73fb.png)
A complete backup of https://factorie.com.au
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations
![Synology Forum en Español - Página principal](https://www.archivebay.com/archive/fa03c910-ae9f-4ebf-ad17-63441e62451b.png)
Synology Forum en Español - Página principal
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![Bata | Quality Shoes and Bags for Women, Men and Kids Since 1894](https://www.archivebay.com/archive/3c27e935-9266-43ae-894b-dae2d7c893ba.png)
Bata | Quality Shoes and Bags for Women, Men and Kids Since 1894
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![Die Schlagerprofis – News aus Schlager und Charts!](https://www.archivebay.com/archive/53670e88-6d07-4427-bba7-2e774977e7dd.png)
Die Schlagerprofis – News aus Schlager und Charts!
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![The Mom & Nurse Life - A Lifestyle Blog Of A Nurse and Future Mom](https://www.archivebay.com/archive/df744cac-d578-41aa-80fe-71950ea1797d.png)
The Mom & Nurse Life - A Lifestyle Blog Of A Nurse and Future Mom
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of newprojecttopics.com.ng](https://www.archivebay.com/archive/3841141e-48cf-411c-97a4-ad59f5d07a92.png)
A complete backup of newprojecttopics.com.ng
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![Monash University - Sign In](https://www.archivebay.com/archive/36c9e9b2-325c-4259-b962-154f5ac05da5.png)
Monash University - Sign In
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
HISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
Lusitania Peace Memorial. Since 1968 this sculptural masterpiece has honoured ‘all who perished’ on 7 May 1915. Kerry-born Jerome Connor (1874–1943), after a career in Washington DC, was asked in 1925 to create a design recalling the Lusitania tragedy and promoting a vision of world peace. The memorial’s ‘mourning fishermen’evoke
HISTORY IRELAND
This is about Irish history, social history, economic history, political history, cultural history and I hope it’s going to be a good resource for anybody who wants to research Irish history. Leanne Lane, Diane Urquhart, Catherine Cox and I have been working on the directory of sources.HISTORY IRELAND
The beneficiaries of the concert were to include a charity supporting debtors. When the morning of 13 April 1742 dawned, the 700 or so who had fought to get tickets for the 600-seat venue were not to know that history was about to be made. To create more space the women had been asked to come without hoops, the men without swords.HISTORY IRELAND
Unfortunately for its builder, the glory days of Mountlong Castle were brief. In 1641 a rebellion in Ulster quickly spread across Ireland. John Long sided with the Catholic rebels in a conflict that has since been known as a war between Catholic natives and Protestant settlers. He and his sons set up camp on top of a hill near Belgooly, but theHISTORY IRELAND
The Pearse Battalion, drawn from Dublin’s universities, had originated as the Regiment of Pearse of the Volunteer Force in 1935, while the 26th Battalion was originally a unit of the army’s second-line reserve, raised in 1940, from 1916–21 veterans. The 26th Battalion eventually numbered 1,000, some 90 of whom stayed on afterits transfer
HISTORY IRELAND
The role of flags and emblems in Irish commemorations Published in Features, Issue 5 (September/October 2019), Volume 27 In this ‘decade of commemorations’, it is worth reflecting on Ireland’s long, contentious yet colourful history of commemorations and the role that flags and emblems have played throughout it.HISTORY IRELAND
l Chief-of-staff, GHQ, March 1918–January 1922; 27 June–23 August 1922. l Commander-in-chief, August 1922–May 1923. l Minister for defence, January–April 1919; January 1922–March 1924. Michael Collins (1890–1922) held the following positions: l Joined the IRB in 1908 and the Irish Volunteers in 1914; in the GPO during the 1916Rising.
HISTORY IRELAND
By John Hayes. One of the most eminent philosophers of the twentieth century, Ludwig Wittgenstein (b. 1889 in Vienna), made several visits to Ireland. The longest of these was from November 1947 to June 1949. For four months during that time he stayed in a cottage in Rosroe, Co. Galway, a dispersed settlement of six houses set between the mouthHISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
Lusitania Peace Memorial. Since 1968 this sculptural masterpiece has honoured ‘all who perished’ on 7 May 1915. Kerry-born Jerome Connor (1874–1943), after a career in Washington DC, was asked in 1925 to create a design recalling the Lusitania tragedy and promoting a vision of world peace. The memorial’s ‘mourning fishermen’evoke
HISTORY IRELAND
This is about Irish history, social history, economic history, political history, cultural history and I hope it’s going to be a good resource for anybody who wants to research Irish history. Leanne Lane, Diane Urquhart, Catherine Cox and I have been working on the directory of sources.HISTORY IRELAND
The beneficiaries of the concert were to include a charity supporting debtors. When the morning of 13 April 1742 dawned, the 700 or so who had fought to get tickets for the 600-seat venue were not to know that history was about to be made. To create more space the women had been asked to come without hoops, the men without swords.HISTORY IRELAND
Unfortunately for its builder, the glory days of Mountlong Castle were brief. In 1641 a rebellion in Ulster quickly spread across Ireland. John Long sided with the Catholic rebels in a conflict that has since been known as a war between Catholic natives and Protestant settlers. He and his sons set up camp on top of a hill near Belgooly, but theHISTORY IRELAND
The Pearse Battalion, drawn from Dublin’s universities, had originated as the Regiment of Pearse of the Volunteer Force in 1935, while the 26th Battalion was originally a unit of the army’s second-line reserve, raised in 1940, from 1916–21 veterans. The 26th Battalion eventually numbered 1,000, some 90 of whom stayed on afterits transfer
HISTORY IRELAND
The role of flags and emblems in Irish commemorations Published in Features, Issue 5 (September/October 2019), Volume 27 In this ‘decade of commemorations’, it is worth reflecting on Ireland’s long, contentious yet colourful history of commemorations and the role that flags and emblems have played throughout it.HISTORY IRELAND
l Chief-of-staff, GHQ, March 1918–January 1922; 27 June–23 August 1922. l Commander-in-chief, August 1922–May 1923. l Minister for defence, January–April 1919; January 1922–March 1924. Michael Collins (1890–1922) held the following positions: l Joined the IRB in 1908 and the Irish Volunteers in 1914; in the GPO during the 1916Rising.
HISTORY IRELAND
By John Hayes. One of the most eminent philosophers of the twentieth century, Ludwig Wittgenstein (b. 1889 in Vienna), made several visits to Ireland. The longest of these was from November 1947 to June 1949. For four months during that time he stayed in a cottage in Rosroe, Co. Galway, a dispersed settlement of six houses set between the mouthHISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELAND
The two greatest modern Irish writers, Yeats and Joyce, both derived inspiration from Parnell’s story. ‘Come gather round me Parnellites’, which appears in Yeats’s Last Poems (1936–9), published more than 40 years after Parnell’s death, underlines Yeats’s abiding fascination with Parnell. Yeats’s words havehelped to preserve
HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions.HISTORY IRELAND
The first account of the drowning atrocity appeared in the highly regarded Edinburgh-based Blackwood’s Magazine in May 1921 and was loosely based on the ambush and death of Captain Lendrum. Later the same year, the story was reissued by Blackwood’s in Tales of the RIC, a book of anonymous short stories. This was an ideal propagandavehicle
HISTORY IRELAND
The story begins in Church Street late on the evening of Tuesday 2 September 1913. At about 8.45pm, as dusk approached, two houses, Nos 66 and 67, collapsed. The rubble fell across the width of the street as far as the door of the Father Mathew Hall on the other side. Later evidence to the coroner’s inquiry stated that there had been aHISTORY IRELAND
June 07. 1921 Patrick Maher and Ned Foley were executed for the killing of two policemen during the rescue of Seán Hogan at Knocklong railway station in May 1919.They were the last to be executed prior to the Truce. 1970 Dr Owen Sheehy-Skeffington (61), humanist and academic, died.; 1917 The start of the Battle of Messines Ridge in West Flanders, in which men from the mainly nationalist 16thHISTORY IRELAND
By Michael Fewer. Fig. 1—The layout of the Four Courts complex as it was in June 1922. Most of the surrounding buildings, including the Four Courts Hotel, were occupied by the National Army during the siege. (Michael Fewer) The Civil War began on 28 June 1922, when the National Army attacked an anti-Treaty force that had been inoccupation of
HISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
The harp that once on Ireland’s coins Published in 18th–19th - Century History, 20th-century / Contemporary History, Artefacts, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Issue 3 May/June2013, Volume 21. It is supposed that Pope Leo X gave a harp or cláirseach to Henry VIII at the same period as Fidei Defensor during that honeyed pre-Reformationperiod.
HISTORY IRELAND
Freemasonry and the Orange Order Published in Issue 1 (Spring 1999), Letters, Letters, Volume 7. Sir,—David Rutland (‘Letters’, HI Winter 1998) raises the question ofwhether there is a connection between Freemasonry and Orangeism. HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
June 8. 1949 George Orwell’s Nineteen-eighty-four, mostly written on the Scottish island of Jura when he was seriously ill with tuberculosis, was published.; 1859 The first edition of the Irish Times as a daily newspaper was published.; 1917 The Butte, Montana, mine disaster: 168 died, including many Irish, when fire broke out in a mineshaft. Butte was the US’s foremost mining town at theHISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions.HISTORY IRELAND
The Pearse Battalion, drawn from Dublin’s universities, had originated as the Regiment of Pearse of the Volunteer Force in 1935, while the 26th Battalion was originally a unit of the army’s second-line reserve, raised in 1940, from 1916–21 veterans. The 26th Battalion eventually numbered 1,000, some 90 of whom stayed on afterits transfer
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
The harp that once on Ireland’s coins Published in 18th–19th - Century History, 20th-century / Contemporary History, Artefacts, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Issue 3 May/June2013, Volume 21. It is supposed that Pope Leo X gave a harp or cláirseach to Henry VIII at the same period as Fidei Defensor during that honeyed pre-Reformationperiod.
HISTORY IRELAND
The Battle of Ross-‘One rebel, emboldened by fanaticism and drunkedness, advanced before his comrades, seized a gun, crammed his hat and wig into it, and cried out, “Come on, boys! her mouth is stopped” At that instant the gunner laid the match to the gun, and blew the unfortunate savage to atoms’ – W.H. Maxwell, History of the Irish Rebellion in 1798(London 18445), footnote p.118. THE BATTLE OF KINSALE, 1601 The Battle of Kinsale, 1601. Kinsale, situated in a hollow and with poor walls, was the worst choice to withstand a siege. (Reproduced by permission of the Board of Trinity College, Dublin) On 21 September 1601 a Spanish fleet of twenty-eight sail occupied the Irish port at Kinsale with about 3,300 men, disembarking in a badly victualled and HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
June 8. 1949 George Orwell’s Nineteen-eighty-four, mostly written on the Scottish island of Jura when he was seriously ill with tuberculosis, was published.; 1859 The first edition of the Irish Times as a daily newspaper was published.; 1917 The Butte, Montana, mine disaster: 168 died, including many Irish, when fire broke out in a mineshaft. Butte was the US’s foremost mining town at theHISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions.HISTORY IRELAND
The Pearse Battalion, drawn from Dublin’s universities, had originated as the Regiment of Pearse of the Volunteer Force in 1935, while the 26th Battalion was originally a unit of the army’s second-line reserve, raised in 1940, from 1916–21 veterans. The 26th Battalion eventually numbered 1,000, some 90 of whom stayed on afterits transfer
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
The harp that once on Ireland’s coins Published in 18th–19th - Century History, 20th-century / Contemporary History, Artefacts, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Issue 3 May/June2013, Volume 21. It is supposed that Pope Leo X gave a harp or cláirseach to Henry VIII at the same period as Fidei Defensor during that honeyed pre-Reformationperiod.
HISTORY IRELAND
The Battle of Ross-‘One rebel, emboldened by fanaticism and drunkedness, advanced before his comrades, seized a gun, crammed his hat and wig into it, and cried out, “Come on, boys! her mouth is stopped” At that instant the gunner laid the match to the gun, and blew the unfortunate savage to atoms’ – W.H. Maxwell, History of the Irish Rebellion in 1798(London 18445), footnote p.118. THE BATTLE OF KINSALE, 1601 The Battle of Kinsale, 1601. Kinsale, situated in a hollow and with poor walls, was the worst choice to withstand a siege. (Reproduced by permission of the Board of Trinity College, Dublin) On 21 September 1601 a Spanish fleet of twenty-eight sail occupied the Irish port at Kinsale with about 3,300 men, disembarking in a badly victualled andHISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
In terms of sheer importance in Irish history, few events compare with the Reformation. In particular, the contrasting outcomes of the Reformation in Ireland and Britain had profound consequences for Anglo-Irish relations over subsequent centuries, and still affect life in Northern Ireland to this day.HISTORY IRELAND
For many people, the imprint on Ireland of the people often called the Anglo-Normans can be summed up in a single word—castles. By the early modern period Ireland’s was the most castellated landscape in Europe, the great majority having been built by descendants of those individuals who began to conquer it and to colonise it in 1169.HISTORY IRELAND
l Chief-of-staff, GHQ, March 1918–January 1922; 27 June–23 August 1922. l Commander-in-chief, August 1922–May 1923. l Minister for defence, January–April 1919; January 1922–March 1924. Michael Collins (1890–1922) held the following positions: l Joined the IRB in 1908 and the Irish Volunteers in 1914; in the GPO during the 1916Rising.
HISTORY IRELAND
The beneficiaries of the concert were to include a charity supporting debtors. When the morning of 13 April 1742 dawned, the 700 or so who had fought to get tickets for the 600-seat venue were not to know that history was about to be made. To create more space the women had been asked to come without hoops, the men without swords.HISTORY IRELAND
The Credit Union League of Ireland, later named the Irish League of Credit Unions (ILCU), was founded on 7 February 1960 in the old Jury’s Hotel, Dame Street, Dublin. During the Lemass era, as Ireland moved forward towards a modern economy and a consumer society,HISTORY IRELAND
The harp that once on Ireland’s coins Published in 18th–19th - Century History, 20th-century / Contemporary History, Artefacts, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Issue 3 May/June2013, Volume 21. It is supposed that Pope Leo X gave a harp or cláirseach to Henry VIII at the same period as Fidei Defensor during that honeyed pre-Reformationperiod.
HISTORY IRELAND
A tower house is a fortified medieval residence of stone, usually four or more stories in height. Like most of the surviving monuments of our medieval past, the majority of Irish tower houses are in poor condition, with collapsed walls and ivy shrouded exteriors reflecting centuries of neglect.HISTORY IRELAND
On show to the world: the Eucharistic Congress, 1932. The Blue Hussars, established in 1931, made their first public appearance at the 1932 Eucharistic Congress. (John Conway) The 31st International Eucharistic Congress, held in Dublin in 1932, is one of the most remarkable public events to have taken place in Ireland in thetwentieth century.
HISTORY IRELAND
‘Unheard-of Mortality’.The Black Death in Ireland Published in Features, Issue 4 (Winter 2001), Medieval History (pre-1500), Volume 9. Study of the Black Death in Ireland is fraught with difficulties: the few Irish chroniclers and annalists tell us relatively little about it; a further complication was the almost continuous warfare and the consequent economic decline already underway HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
Lusitania Peace Memorial. Since 1968 this sculptural masterpiece has honoured ‘all who perished’ on 7 May 1915. Kerry-born Jerome Connor (1874–1943), after a career in Washington DC, was asked in 1925 to create a design recalling the Lusitania tragedy and promoting a vision of world peace. The memorial’s ‘mourning fishermen’evoke
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
On show to the world: the Eucharistic Congress, 1932. The Blue Hussars, established in 1931, made their first public appearance at the 1932 Eucharistic Congress. (John Conway) The 31st International Eucharistic Congress, held in Dublin in 1932, is one of the most remarkable public events to have taken place in Ireland in thetwentieth century.
HISTORY IRELAND
The feminist organisation of which I was a founding member in 1970 was called the ‘Irish Women’s Liberation Movement’ (IWLM). It is historically inappropriate to call it ‘the women’s movement’ as there were many different ‘women’s movements’, ranging from the Irish Housewives’ Association and the Irish Country-women’s Association to the various feminist Trotskyist andHISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
Lusitania Peace Memorial. Since 1968 this sculptural masterpiece has honoured ‘all who perished’ on 7 May 1915. Kerry-born Jerome Connor (1874–1943), after a career in Washington DC, was asked in 1925 to create a design recalling the Lusitania tragedy and promoting a vision of world peace. The memorial’s ‘mourning fishermen’evoke
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
On show to the world: the Eucharistic Congress, 1932. The Blue Hussars, established in 1931, made their first public appearance at the 1932 Eucharistic Congress. (John Conway) The 31st International Eucharistic Congress, held in Dublin in 1932, is one of the most remarkable public events to have taken place in Ireland in thetwentieth century.
HISTORY IRELAND
The feminist organisation of which I was a founding member in 1970 was called the ‘Irish Women’s Liberation Movement’ (IWLM). It is historically inappropriate to call it ‘the women’s movement’ as there were many different ‘women’s movements’, ranging from the Irish Housewives’ Association and the Irish Country-women’s Association to the various feminist Trotskyist andHISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
Situated in the centre of Boyle, King House has had a varied history over 300 years but is now fully restored, as Nollaig Feeney explains. One of the earliest surviving substantial townhouses in the province of Connacht, King House was built for Sir Henry King MP (c. 1681–1739) between 1720 and 1740.HISTORY IRELAND
The first account of the drowning atrocity appeared in the highly regarded Edinburgh-based Blackwood’s Magazine in May 1921 and was loosely based on the ambush and death of Captain Lendrum. Later the same year, the story was reissued by Blackwood’s in Tales of the RIC, a book of anonymous short stories. This was an ideal propagandavehicle
HISTORY IRELAND
The Pearse Battalion, drawn from Dublin’s universities, had originated as the Regiment of Pearse of the Volunteer Force in 1935, while the 26th Battalion was originally a unit of the army’s second-line reserve, raised in 1940, from 1916–21 veterans. The 26th Battalion eventually numbered 1,000, some 90 of whom stayed on afterits transfer
HISTORY IRELAND
The 2nd battalion was a regular one that served from the beginning of the war to the end. In August 1914, 87.3 per cent of its members were born in Ireland and 9.1 per cent in England. These were men who enlisted before the war. Irish recruitment into the British army between 1910 and 1913 remained steady.HISTORY IRELAND
Soloheadbeg: what really happened? Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Features, Issue 1 (Spring 1997), Revolutionary Period 1912-23, Volume 5. Seventy-eight years ago on a quiet Tipperary roadway the first nationalist revolt against the British Empire this century was started by a small band of armed men from townlands and villages—Donohill, Solohead and Hollyford—in theHISTORY IRELAND
‘Unheard-of Mortality’.The Black Death in Ireland Published in Features, Issue 4 (Winter 2001), Medieval History (pre-1500), Volume 9. Study of the Black Death in Ireland is fraught with difficulties: the few Irish chroniclers and annalists tell us relatively little about it; a further complication was the almost continuous warfare and the consequent economic decline already underwayHISTORY IRELAND
Triumphant return to Ireland. The life-sized statue of Danno O’Mahony erected in the centre of Ballydehob in 2001. Danno, along with his manager Jack McGrath and his wife Esther, set sail from Boston for Cobh, Co. Cork, on 18 July 1936 aboard the liner Scythia.Upon his arrival he
HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
Lusitania Peace Memorial. Since 1968 this sculptural masterpiece has honoured ‘all who perished’ on 7 May 1915. Kerry-born Jerome Connor (1874–1943), after a career in Washington DC, was asked in 1925 to create a design recalling the Lusitania tragedy and promoting a vision of world peace. The memorial’s ‘mourning fishermen’evoke
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
On show to the world: the Eucharistic Congress, 1932. The Blue Hussars, established in 1931, made their first public appearance at the 1932 Eucharistic Congress. (John Conway) The 31st International Eucharistic Congress, held in Dublin in 1932, is one of the most remarkable public events to have taken place in Ireland in thetwentieth century.
HISTORY IRELAND
The feminist organisation of which I was a founding member in 1970 was called the ‘Irish Women’s Liberation Movement’ (IWLM). It is historically inappropriate to call it ‘the women’s movement’ as there were many different ‘women’s movements’, ranging from the Irish Housewives’ Association and the Irish Country-women’s Association to the various feminist Trotskyist andHISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
Lusitania Peace Memorial. Since 1968 this sculptural masterpiece has honoured ‘all who perished’ on 7 May 1915. Kerry-born Jerome Connor (1874–1943), after a career in Washington DC, was asked in 1925 to create a design recalling the Lusitania tragedy and promoting a vision of world peace. The memorial’s ‘mourning fishermen’evoke
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
On show to the world: the Eucharistic Congress, 1932. The Blue Hussars, established in 1931, made their first public appearance at the 1932 Eucharistic Congress. (John Conway) The 31st International Eucharistic Congress, held in Dublin in 1932, is one of the most remarkable public events to have taken place in Ireland in thetwentieth century.
HISTORY IRELAND
The feminist organisation of which I was a founding member in 1970 was called the ‘Irish Women’s Liberation Movement’ (IWLM). It is historically inappropriate to call it ‘the women’s movement’ as there were many different ‘women’s movements’, ranging from the Irish Housewives’ Association and the Irish Country-women’s Association to the various feminist Trotskyist andHISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
Situated in the centre of Boyle, King House has had a varied history over 300 years but is now fully restored, as Nollaig Feeney explains. One of the earliest surviving substantial townhouses in the province of Connacht, King House was built for Sir Henry King MP (c. 1681–1739) between 1720 and 1740.HISTORY IRELAND
The first account of the drowning atrocity appeared in the highly regarded Edinburgh-based Blackwood’s Magazine in May 1921 and was loosely based on the ambush and death of Captain Lendrum. Later the same year, the story was reissued by Blackwood’s in Tales of the RIC, a book of anonymous short stories. This was an ideal propagandavehicle
HISTORY IRELAND
The Pearse Battalion, drawn from Dublin’s universities, had originated as the Regiment of Pearse of the Volunteer Force in 1935, while the 26th Battalion was originally a unit of the army’s second-line reserve, raised in 1940, from 1916–21 veterans. The 26th Battalion eventually numbered 1,000, some 90 of whom stayed on afterits transfer
HISTORY IRELAND
The 2nd battalion was a regular one that served from the beginning of the war to the end. In August 1914, 87.3 per cent of its members were born in Ireland and 9.1 per cent in England. These were men who enlisted before the war. Irish recruitment into the British army between 1910 and 1913 remained steady.HISTORY IRELAND
Soloheadbeg: what really happened? Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Features, Issue 1 (Spring 1997), Revolutionary Period 1912-23, Volume 5. Seventy-eight years ago on a quiet Tipperary roadway the first nationalist revolt against the British Empire this century was started by a small band of armed men from townlands and villages—Donohill, Solohead and Hollyford—in theHISTORY IRELAND
‘Unheard-of Mortality’.The Black Death in Ireland Published in Features, Issue 4 (Winter 2001), Medieval History (pre-1500), Volume 9. Study of the Black Death in Ireland is fraught with difficulties: the few Irish chroniclers and annalists tell us relatively little about it; a further complication was the almost continuous warfare and the consequent economic decline already underwayHISTORY IRELAND
Triumphant return to Ireland. The life-sized statue of Danno O’Mahony erected in the centre of Ballydehob in 2001. Danno, along with his manager Jack McGrath and his wife Esther, set sail from Boston for Cobh, Co. Cork, on 18 July 1936 aboard the liner Scythia.Upon his arrival he
HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
Lusitania Peace Memorial. Since 1968 this sculptural masterpiece has honoured ‘all who perished’ on 7 May 1915. Kerry-born Jerome Connor (1874–1943), after a career in Washington DC, was asked in 1925 to create a design recalling the Lusitania tragedy and promoting a vision of world peace. The memorial’s ‘mourning fishermen’evoke
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
On show to the world: the Eucharistic Congress, 1932. The Blue Hussars, established in 1931, made their first public appearance at the 1932 Eucharistic Congress. (John Conway) The 31st International Eucharistic Congress, held in Dublin in 1932, is one of the most remarkable public events to have taken place in Ireland in thetwentieth century.
HISTORY IRELAND
The feminist organisation of which I was a founding member in 1970 was called the ‘Irish Women’s Liberation Movement’ (IWLM). It is historically inappropriate to call it ‘the women’s movement’ as there were many different ‘women’s movements’, ranging from the Irish Housewives’ Association and the Irish Country-women’s Association to the various feminist Trotskyist andHISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
From 1628, King Charles I was deep in negotiations with commissioners from Salé, Morocco, which resulted in a mutual trade pact. (University of Birmingham) The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterraneanregion
HISTORY IRELAND
Lusitania Peace Memorial. Since 1968 this sculptural masterpiece has honoured ‘all who perished’ on 7 May 1915. Kerry-born Jerome Connor (1874–1943), after a career in Washington DC, was asked in 1925 to create a design recalling the Lusitania tragedy and promoting a vision of world peace. The memorial’s ‘mourning fishermen’evoke
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
On show to the world: the Eucharistic Congress, 1932. The Blue Hussars, established in 1931, made their first public appearance at the 1932 Eucharistic Congress. (John Conway) The 31st International Eucharistic Congress, held in Dublin in 1932, is one of the most remarkable public events to have taken place in Ireland in thetwentieth century.
HISTORY IRELAND
The feminist organisation of which I was a founding member in 1970 was called the ‘Irish Women’s Liberation Movement’ (IWLM). It is historically inappropriate to call it ‘the women’s movement’ as there were many different ‘women’s movements’, ranging from the Irish Housewives’ Association and the Irish Country-women’s Association to the various feminist Trotskyist andHISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? The Gaelic people of Ireland originated in the ancient region of Scythia—roughly corresponding with southern Russia—and perhaps imagined by medieval scholars to have some connection with Scoti, a Latin term for the Irish. They dwelt for a time in Egypt, then wandered for many years, and at last conquered Spain.HISTORY IRELAND
Situated in the centre of Boyle, King House has had a varied history over 300 years but is now fully restored, as Nollaig Feeney explains. One of the earliest surviving substantial townhouses in the province of Connacht, King House was built for Sir Henry King MP (c. 1681–1739) between 1720 and 1740.HISTORY IRELAND
The first account of the drowning atrocity appeared in the highly regarded Edinburgh-based Blackwood’s Magazine in May 1921 and was loosely based on the ambush and death of Captain Lendrum. Later the same year, the story was reissued by Blackwood’s in Tales of the RIC, a book of anonymous short stories. This was an ideal propagandavehicle
HISTORY IRELAND
The Pearse Battalion, drawn from Dublin’s universities, had originated as the Regiment of Pearse of the Volunteer Force in 1935, while the 26th Battalion was originally a unit of the army’s second-line reserve, raised in 1940, from 1916–21 veterans. The 26th Battalion eventually numbered 1,000, some 90 of whom stayed on afterits transfer
HISTORY IRELAND
The 2nd battalion was a regular one that served from the beginning of the war to the end. In August 1914, 87.3 per cent of its members were born in Ireland and 9.1 per cent in England. These were men who enlisted before the war. Irish recruitment into the British army between 1910 and 1913 remained steady.HISTORY IRELAND
Soloheadbeg: what really happened? Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Features, Issue 1 (Spring 1997), Revolutionary Period 1912-23, Volume 5. Seventy-eight years ago on a quiet Tipperary roadway the first nationalist revolt against the British Empire this century was started by a small band of armed men from townlands and villages—Donohill, Solohead and Hollyford—in theHISTORY IRELAND
‘Unheard-of Mortality’.The Black Death in Ireland Published in Features, Issue 4 (Winter 2001), Medieval History (pre-1500), Volume 9. Study of the Black Death in Ireland is fraught with difficulties: the few Irish chroniclers and annalists tell us relatively little about it; a further complication was the almost continuous warfare and the consequent economic decline already underwayHISTORY IRELAND
Triumphant return to Ireland. The life-sized statue of Danno O’Mahony erected in the centre of Ballydehob in 2001. Danno, along with his manager Jack McGrath and his wife Esther, set sail from Boston for Cobh, Co. Cork, on 18 July 1936 aboard the liner Scythia.Upon his arrival he
HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
May 31. 1916 The two-day Battle of Jutland, the first and only meeting between the German High Seas Fleet and the British Grand Fleet, began.; 1962 Adolf Eichmann was executed in Ramleh Prison near Tel Aviv for his part in the wartime mass execution of millions of Jews.; 1941 Over a 37-minute period in the early hours of the morning four German bombs were dropped on Dublin, hitting the PhoenixHISTORY IRELAND
The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterranean region but also the Atlantic seaboard as far north as Iceland.HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions.HISTORY IRELAND
June 04. 1820 Henry Grattan (74), politician and orator who unsuccessfully introduced a bill for Catholic Emancipation in the Irish parliament (1794), died. 1989 Protesters demanding greater democratic freedoms were fired on by police and troops in Tiananmen Square, Beijing. Several thousand were killed. 1820 Henry Grattan, outstanding orator and dominant figure in the Irish parliament (1782 DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? Most of us have heard, at one time or another, that Ireland was peopled in remote times by settlers from Spain. These settlers, the ancestors of the Irish people of today, are often referred to as‘Milesians’.
HISTORY IRELAND
The feminist organisation of which I was a founding member in 1970 was called the ‘Irish Women’s Liberation Movement’ (IWLM). It is historically inappropriate to call it ‘the women’s movement’ as there were many different ‘women’s movements’, ranging from the Irish Housewives’ Association and the Irish Country-women’s Association to the various feminist Trotskyist and HISTORY IRELANDHOW TO OBTAIN IRISH CITIZENSHIPIRISH BRITISH WARIRISH MILITARY STRENGTHIRISH SOLDIERS WW2OBTAINING IRISH CITIZENSHIP THROUGHANCESTRY
The Irish Citizen Army (ICA) was born out of the struggle between the workers and the employers during the Lockout of 1913. A defence force had been mooted many times before the ICA was actually formed, and police brutality during previous strikes in Dublin, Cork and Wexford had convinced some of the necessity for such a force.HISTORY IRELAND
The Two Patricks: RTÉ’s Lost Among Wolves & Fanatic Heart Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Issue 2 (Summer 2001), News, Volume 9. Two recent TV documentaries on Irish revolutionaries, both in RTÉ’s True Lives series, offer a strikingly contrasting view of the lives of two men caught up in the politics of the twentiethcentury.
HISTORY IRELANDHEDGE SCHOOLSPERIODARCHIVENEW BOOKSDIGITALEDITIONGUIDELINES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland andaround the world.
HISTORY IRELAND
Search for: Recent Posts. The Connaught Rangers mutiny—1920, 1970 & 2020; Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy?HISTORY IRELAND
May 31. 1916 The two-day Battle of Jutland, the first and only meeting between the German High Seas Fleet and the British Grand Fleet, began.; 1962 Adolf Eichmann was executed in Ramleh Prison near Tel Aviv for his part in the wartime mass execution of millions of Jews.; 1941 Over a 37-minute period in the early hours of the morning four German bombs were dropped on Dublin, hitting the PhoenixHISTORY IRELAND
The sack of Baltimore, the only recorded instance of a slaving raid by corsairs in Ireland, was part of a wider pattern across Europe, encompassing not only the entire Mediterranean region but also the Atlantic seaboard as far north as Iceland.HISTORY IRELAND
1861 Patrick Bronte (84), clergyman, poet and social campaigner, died.By the time he reached his mid-70s, Bronte was a lonely widower in failing health, who had lost most of his family—first his wife, Maria, followed four years later by his daughters Maria (11) and Elizabeth (10), and then, over just an eight-month period, his son Branwell (31) and his daughters Emily (30) and Anne (29).HISTORY IRELAND
‘Shipped for the Barbadoes’: Cromwell and Irish migration to the Caribbean Published in Confederate War and Cromwell, Cromwell, Early Modern History (1500–1700), Features, Issue 4 (Jul/Aug 2008), Volume 16. Between 1641 and 1653 Ireland suffered a demographic collapse of staggering proportions. DID THE IRISH COME FROM SPAIN? Most of us have heard, at one time or another, that Ireland was peopled in remote times by settlers from Spain. These settlers, the ancestors of the Irish people of today, are often referred to as‘Milesians’.
HISTORY IRELAND
June 04. 1820 Henry Grattan (74), politician and orator who unsuccessfully introduced a bill for Catholic Emancipation in the Irish parliament (1794), died. 1989 Protesters demanding greater democratic freedoms were fired on by police and troops in Tiananmen Square, Beijing. Several thousand were killed. 1820 Henry Grattan, outstanding orator and dominant figure in the Irish parliament (1782HISTORY IRELAND
Situated in the centre of Boyle, King House has had a varied history over 300 years but is now fully restored, as Nollaig Feeney explains. One of the earliest surviving substantial townhouses in the province of Connacht, King House was built for Sir Henry King MP (c. 1681–1739) between 1720 and 1740.HISTORY IRELAND
Wittgenstein’s Irish cottage Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Features, Issue 4 (July/August 2018), Volume 26 It is remarkable that three noted practitioners respectively of the arts of painting, dialectic and poetry chose a modest Connemara dwelling as their base.HISTORY IRELAND
Soloheadbeg: what really happened? Published in 20th-century / Contemporary History, Features, Issue 1 (Spring 1997), Revolutionary Period 1912-23, Volume 5. Seventy-eight years ago on a quiet Tipperary roadway the first nationalist revolt against the British Empire this century was started by a small band of armed men from townlands and villages—Donohill, Solohead and Hollyford—in theHISTORY IRELAND
The Forsa Cosanta Aitiuil came into being on 6 February 1946 with the demise of its predecessor, the Local Defence Force (LDF). The LDF had been formed in 1941 as a part-time force to support the Permanent Defence Force (PDF), the regular army and air corps, and in 1943 numbered over 100,000.HISTORY IRELAND
The Soldiers Died in the Great War 1914–1919 (SDGW) series was first published in 1921 and was compiled from official casualty returns. Each regiment and unit in the British army that served in the Great War had its own listing of their dead.HISTORY IRELAND
‘Unheard-of Mortality’.The Black Death in Ireland Published in Features, Issue 4 (Winter 2001), Medieval History (pre-1500), Volume 9. Study of the Black Death in Ireland is fraught with difficulties: the few Irish chroniclers and annalists tell us relatively little about it; a further complication was the almost continuous warfare and the consequent economic decline already underway*
*
*
*
*
Login Subscribe
To renew a subscription please login first*
Search for:
* Home
* About History Ireland* Hedge Schools
* Subscribe
* Period
* 20th-century / Contemporary History* Home Rule
* World War I
* Revolutionary Period 1912-23 * Devalera & Fianna Fail* The Emergency
* Troubles in Northern Ireland* Celtic Tiger
* 20th Century Social Perspectives * 18th–19th – Century History* Penal Laws
* Grattan’s Parliament * The United Irishmen* The Act of Union
* Robert Emmet
* Catholic Emancipation* The Famine
* 1848 Rebellion
* Irish Republican Brotherhood / Fenians* The Land League
* Parnell & his Party* Gaelic Revival
* 18th-19th Century Social Perspectives * Early Modern History (1500–1700)* The Reformation
* Hugh O’Neill
* Plantation of Ireland* 1641 Rebellion
* Confederate War and Cromwell* Williamite Wars
* Early Modern History Social Perspectives * Medieval History (pre-1500)* Gaelic Ireland
* Anglo-Norman Ireland* Bruce Invasion
* Medieval Social Perspectives * Pre-Norman History * Pre-history / Archaeology* Celts
* Vikings
* St Patrick
* Pre-Norman Social Perspectives* Archive
* Volume 1
* Volume 2
* Volume 3
* Volume 4
* Volume 5
* Volume 6
* Volume 7
* Volume 8
* Volume 9
* Volume 10
* Volume 11
* Volume 12
* Volume 13
* Volume 14
* Volume 15
* Volume 16
* Volume 17
* Volume 18
* Volume 19
* Volume 20
* Volume 21
* Volume 22
* Volume 23
* Volume 24
* Volume 25
* Volume 26
* Volume 27
* Volume 28
* New Books
* Digital Edition
* Guidelines
FEATURED IN THE CURRENT ISSUEMAY / JUNE 2020
IN THIS MONTH'S ISSUE: * The Dillon regimental colour * Registers of successful vaccinations * P.J. Carroll factory, Dundalk * Herstory: Ireland’s EPIC women * ‘Topnobbers’—James Joyce and Louis Werner * The Irish Brigade at the Battle of Fontenoy * Hurling in Thurles and district before the GAA * ‘The shadow of the gunman’ in 1932 and 2020and many more....
ON THIS DAY
MAY 13
s
1919 Two RIC officers, Sgt Peter Wallace and Constable Michael Enright, were killed during the rescue of Seán Hogan by Dan Breen and Seán Treacy, both of whom were wounded,Read More >
EVENTS
MAY 13
Mon 8.15pm Clontarf Historical Society, Resource Centre, St John the Baptist Church. GNR railway history and the importance of Clontarf railway station house, Siobhán Osgood. Adm. €5.Read More >
FROM THE ARCHIVES
JEREMIAH O’DONOVAN ROSSA’S FUNERAL Jeremiah O’Donovan Rossa was born in 1831 near Rosscarbery, Co. Cork, and in 1856 he formed the Phoenix National Literary Society in Skibbereen. This was a secret society whose aimTUDOR FIANTS
Digitisation has transformed how we practise family history. There are over 120 million Irish historical records on-line. It is now possible to trace and document Irish families to a much Read more from the Archives >HEDGE SCHOOL
FORTHCOMING HEDGE SCHOOLS Editor Tommy Graham will be hosting a series of History Ireland Hedge Schools, lively round-table discussions with historians and well-knownpersonalities.
HEDGE SCHOOL AUDIOS AND VIDEOS A collection of audio and video recordings of the 20+ more Hedge Schools we have put on around Ireland, featuring well-known historians in lively debate on popular and relevant topics Read more from Hedge School >BOOK REVIEWS
THE WOODS OF IRELAND: A HISTORY, 700–1800 In these days of steel, concrete and plastic we have forgotten what a fundamental raw mat-erial timber once was. It was crucial to shipbuilding until the first iron-hulled vessels of A NATION AND NOT A RABBLE: THE IRISH REVOLUTION 1913–1923 Though subtitled ‘the Irish Revolution 1913–1923’, this work is as much concerned with how the revolution came to be remembered and contested in memory as it is with telling the Read more from Book Reviews >LETTERS EXTRA
Read extended correspondence we don't have room for in the paper edition of the magazine. They are no less interesting for that! >*
*
That field of glory. The story of Clontarf, from battleground togarden suburb
Read More
Darkest Dublin: The story of the Church Street disaster and a pictorial account of the slums of Dublin in 1913Read More
*
PERSONAL HISTORIES
Personal Histories is an initiative by History Ireland, which aims to capture the individual histories of Irish people both in Ireland and around the world. It is hoped to build an extensive database reflecting Irish lives, giving them a chance to be heard, remembered and to add their voice to the historical record. Click Here to go to the Personal Histories pageEDITOR’S CHOICE
Planning of the RisingRead More
James Bryce and the politics of inhumanityRead More
Our men in Mauritius: Lowry Cole and Pope HennessyRead More
About Us | Contact Us| Advertising
| Subscriptions
| Newsletter
| Podcast
| Terms & Conditions| Privacy Policy
Copyright 2020 History Ireland. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2020 History Publications Ltd, Unit 9, 78 Furze Road, Sandyford, Dublin 18, Ireland | Tel. +353-1-293 3568 We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you arehappy with it.Ok
Details
Copyright © 2024 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0