Sunday, May 30, 2021
Online Lecture #5 : The Waterford Experiment
In 1783, Passage East was chosen as the site of New Geneva, in an ambitious plan to relocate the residents of Geneva.
Professor Richard Whatmore from St Andrew's University brings us back to the events of the time.
Labels:
18th century,
2021,
Geneva,
New Geneva,
Passage East,
virtual lecture
Sunday, May 23, 2021
Various events around the country
News from the Federation of Local History Societies
(1) Co Roscommon - Rathcrogan Centre Reopens
see link below
https://mcusercontent.com/e5e3dfd4c12216d7e548edf06/files/242836da-4891-71d2-a67d-055946cefa6f/Rthcroghan_Centre.01.pdf
(2) Co Cork - Cork Folklore Project
see link below
https://mcusercontent.com/e5e3dfd4c12216d7e548edf06/files/d179bff4-b8e3-5e54-48a4-3e1daedeeadb/Cork_Folklore_Project.pdf
(3) Merrion Press - Publications
see link below
https://mcusercontent.com/e5e3dfd4c12216d7e548edf06/files/da66b6de-92dd-d807-2c5d-0ec2697fc1fa/Merrion_press.pdf
(4) Co Kildare - The Royal Sites of Ireland
The Royal Sites of Ireland are a group of six unique collectives of largely prehistoric monuments and sites associated in early medieval and medieval texts as the principal ancient sites of royal inauguration in Ireland.
Spread throughout the island, four of the sites represent the ancient Kingdoms of Ireland and its current provinces of North (Emain Macha), South (Rock of Cashel), East (DĂșn Ailline) and West (Rathcroghan). Tara was the seat of the High Kings of Ireland situated in the ancient ‘fifth’ province of Meath (Midhe) while the Hill of Uisneach the ‘omphalos’ or centre was where the 5 kingdoms met.
The respective Local Authorities of Kildare, Meath, Westmeath, Roscommon and Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon, with Tipperary as lead authority, have been working together during the lifetime of the last World Heritage Tentative List to develop the Royal Sites of Ireland case for ‘outstanding universal value’ the key attribute for world heritage sites. As the current list is up for renewal, the Royal Sites of Ireland has to reapply to remain on the Tentative List and progress further.
To engage with communities in the 6 counties in this challenging time of Covid, a website www.royalsites.ie has been launched, to update people as we progress but also to allow people feed into the process. I am encouring everyone to take part oin the survey
Bridget Loughlin
Heritage Officer | Kildare County Council
Direct: +353 45 980791 | Switch: 353 45 980200 | Email: bloughlin@kildarecoco.ie | Web: www.kildarecoco.ie |
Planning Dept, Kildare County Council, Aras Chill Dara, Devoy Park, Newbridge Road, Naas, Ireland, W91 X77F |
KildareHeritage countykildareheritageoffice
(5) Northern Ireland - Ulster History Project Online Conference
Subject: Ulster History Project Online Conference 22 May 2021
Members/ Contacts
For details please visit the website where there are details of the Conference and joining instructions
see below
https://ulsterhistoryproject.org.uk/one-hundred-years-of-northern-ireland/
(6) New Book - The First Irish Cities - An 18th Century Transformation
Members may be (should be) interested in this new book of wide national and local interest
"This is the book we've been waiting for" Professor Sean Connolly.
"Highly original, well-researched and elegantly written … Transforms our understanding of many important questions.'—Eugenio Biagini, author of British Democracy and Irish Nationalism 1876-1906
"Exemplary. The study of Irish urban history has been until now patchy. Dickson's work significantly reduces this scholarly deficit.'—Jim Smyth, Emeritus Professor, University of Notre Dame.
"Drawing on his magisterial knowledge of all facets of eighteenth-century Ireland, Dickson unpicks the country's anomalous urban histories - stemming from the extraordinary mid-century growth spurts that created cities comparable to their great European and British counterparts.’—Finola O'Kane, Professor, University College Dublin.
The First Irish Cities. An Eighteenth-Century Transformation
by David Dickson
Yale UP | 9780300229462 | hb | 352 pages | 36 colour plates, 28 figures, 11 tables, 2 maps | stg£25.00
This magisterial book studies the development of Irish cities in the 18th century, a subject long neglected, despite the exceptional development that took place during the long eighteenth century. The author, well known for his recent history of Dublin (Profile) and for his earlier Old World Colony : Cork and South Munster 1630--1830 (Cork UP 9781859184035) looks at Waterford, Limerick, Belfast, Dublin, Cork, Derry, Sligo, Galway, Kilkenny and Drogheda. The book explores the underlying patterns in their physical, social and cultural evolution and looks at how these relate to the complex legacies of a violent past.
Beautifully illustrated and excellent value, this account reveals both the distinctive nature of Ireland's first cities, and through the Irish diaspora, how influential they would become beyond the country's shores.
PUBLICITY:
This book will be widely reviewed both nationally and locally. In the following months the author will be engaging with several local history societies giving lectures in person and by Zoom. One is forthcoming very soon to the members of the RDS (several thousand).
Either this weekend or next, the Irish Times will be publishing a 1,500 word article by the author.
There will be podcasts in association with History Ireland and lots, lots more.
The book is available from good bookshops Island wide
(7) Irish Servicewomen in the Great War
see link below
https://mcusercontent.com/e5e3dfd4c12216d7e548edf06/files/79ed4833-daeb-ce46-a3f3-5f81df4f575e/.FOLHS_Irish_Servicewomen_in_the_great_war.doc
Labels:
Federation,
FLHS,
News,
publications
Sunday, May 16, 2021
News from the Federation of Local History Societies
Where we share news of happenings of historical interest around the country
(click on the link below for contents)
FLHS Newsletter
Labels:
Events,
Federation,
News
Friday, April 30, 2021
Online Lecture #4 : PJ Mahon: Waterford's Forgotten World No.1 Golfer
For this month's lecture Cian Manning will be telling us all about P.J Mahon, a somewhat underappreciated sports star from Waterford's past!
Labels:
2021,
Golf,
Sport,
virtual lecture
Sunday, March 28, 2021
Online Lecture #3 : The Burgery Ambush
In this lecture Conor Donegan, from Dunmore East, looks back at the Burgery Ambush which occured 100 years ago and marked the climax of the War of Independence in Waterford.
Labels:
2021,
Dungarvan,
virtual lecture,
War of Independence
Friday, February 26, 2021
Online Lecture #2 : The Irish Post Independence Literary Renaissance 1930s-60s
Our second virtual talk is by David Robson, on the subject of The Irish Post Independence Literary Renaissance, 1930s-60s, focusing on Patrick Kavanagh and Flann O'Brien
Labels:
2021,
literature,
virtual lecture,
writers
Friday, January 29, 2021
Online Lecture #1 : The Pickardstown Ambush : A Family Story
In our first lecture of 2021, Erica Fay tells us about her great-uncle's involvement in the ambush.
Labels:
2021,
Pickardstown ambush,
Tramore,
virtual lecture
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)