The lecture planned for 27 May 2022
‘A century of change – women and Irish diplomacy’
by Dr Ann Marie O’Brien has been cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances.
Apologies to all, we're looking forward to seeing you on our summer outings.
The lecture planned for 27 May 2022
‘A century of change – women and Irish diplomacy’
by Dr Ann Marie O’Brien has been cancelled due to unforeseen circumstances.
Apologies to all, we're looking forward to seeing you on our summer outings.
Following the AGM of 8th April 2022, the following committee was elected:
Officers:
Committee Members :
The Waterford Archaeological and Historical Society is holding the next lecture in our 2021 – 2022 programme at 8 pm on Friday, April 29th in St Patrick’s Gateway Centre, Waterford (Eircode X91 YX61) when archaeologist Dr Rebecca Boyd will deliver a talk titled ‘The Best Seat in the House? Being At Home in the Viking Age’.
Waterford is home to the Vikings, with dozens of Viking-Age houses excavated here. These are very like houses from Cork and Dublin, but one particular detail stands out. Some houses in Waterford had a special bench built in beside the hearth in the middle of the home. This hints at the presence of a ‘high seat’, the most important place to sit in a Viking house, a symbol of power and status. Using the idea of a Viking ‘high seat’, we will tour around the Viking world to see just how such displays of power and status were manifested in the Viking home.
Interior of reconstructed Viking house (Dr. Rebecca Boyd).
Rebecca’s lecture will begin in Iceland with Njal’s Saga, one of the most famous sagas of all, where the house itself is a central character. This house is a Viking longhouse, and there are many examples of these across Scandinavia and the North Atlantic. The power of the family is manifested in the house, in its size, its architecture, and its obvious displays of power, connection and wealth. We will look at longhouses with ritual feasting, of weapon displays, of imported precious glass, to see what story these houses tell. Then, we will return to Waterford, to reflect on the story and power of our ‘Viking’ houses.
Dr Rebecca Boyd has worked in Irish archaeology for more than 20 years, in commercial, research and academic settings. Rebecca’s own research focuses on the Viking world and she has written and spoken nationally and
internationally on the archaeology of Ireland’s Viking Age. Her new book Exploring Ireland’s Viking Age Towns: Houses and Homes will be published later this year. It is the first detailed look at urbanism in Ireland’s Viking Age and is the result of an Irish Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship based in the Dept of Archaeology in
University College Cork. Rebecca currently works as Research Archaeologist for IAC on the Drumclay Crannog project, one of Ireland’s most exciting medieval settlements.
*********************FORTHCOMING LECTURE**********************
Here are details of the final talk in May:
27/05/2022 Dr Ann Marie O’Brien ‘A century of change – women and Irish diplomacy’
*********************SUMMER OUTINGS**********************
The Society is working on a programme of Summer outings which will include: 16/06/2022 The People’s Park and environs with Joe Falvey
14/07/2022 Historic Stradbally with Cian Flaherty
07/08/2022 The Siege of Waterford 1922 with James Doherty
The next lecture of our 2021-2022 programme will be on Friday, March 25th at 8:00pm in St Patrick’s Gateway Centre, Waterford (Eircode X91 YX61) when historian Prof. David Dickson will deliver a talk titled ‘Eighteenth-Century Waterford: A Singular City?’.
Prof. Dickson’s lecture will begin by reflecting on the emergence of the first cities in eighteenth-century Ireland, distinguishing them from what had come before – walled towns, very modest by European standards, that had been repeatedly shattered in seventeenth-century warfare. In what respects were these new Irish cities similar to what was happening in Britain and Europe? In the second part of the lecture David will look more closely at 'the quays of the kingdom', Cork, Limerick and Waterford, and the common elements in the rise of the three Munster Atlantic ports; he will also touch on the common elements in the social and economic crisis that beset them in the 1820s. The third segment will focus on how far Waterford was an outlier, a singular city, in the history of religious conflict and exclusion that was evident in most Irish cities of the period, and it will explore why this may been the case. The lecture will conclude with a comparison of the evolution of Waterford and Derry, which were each situated on broad-rivers and graced with their first bridges in the 1790s. Both cities were very much influenced by the interventions of their Church of Ireland bishops and, more discreetly, by the shadowy influence of the Beresford family. But was that all?
The next lecture in our 2021 – 2022 programme at the earlier time of 6 pm on Friday January 28th when historian Dr Pat McCarthy will deliver a talk titled ‘The experience of Waterford loyalists in the revolutionary decade 1912-1923’.
“I had been brought up under the union jack and had no desire to live under any other emblem.”
The words of C.P. Crane, a Tipperary Resident Magistrate, in 1923, would have found an echo in the hearts of many of Waterford’s loyalist community. By 1926 their population had declined by 40% compared to 1911 and those who survived now lived in a different environment. In 1912 the small but influential loyalist community in Waterford had been vocal in their opposition to Home Rule. Led by Sir William Goff-Davis Goff and Dr Henry Stuart O’Hara, Church of Ireland bishop of the united dioceses of Waterford, Lismore, Cashel and Emly, they had publicly protested against the Home Rule Bill. On October 2 that year Dr O’Hara had led a prayer service in Christchurch which concluded with a signing of the Ulster Covenant by some of his flock – possibly a unique event in Munster. By 1914 they were very much aware that Home Rule for at least three provinces was inevitable and that in the event of a civil war they were extremely vulnerable. Those who attended an anti-Home Rule event had their names noted by a local newspaper which led to sharp exchanges in the House of Commons between the Conservative leader, Andrew Bonar-Law and John Redmond, leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party and MP for Waterford. The outbreak of WW1 changed that, at least temporarily, and they responded enthusiastically to the call to arms. They paid a high price for their loyalty to King and Empire. After the war, they again found themselves vulnerable, especially between the Truce (July 1921) and the end of the Civil War (May 1923), a period in which they were subject to opportunistic violence, a republican campaign of ‘Big House’ burnings and social disorder. In this lecture distinguished historian Pat McCarthy will look at the experiences of Waterford’s loyalist community during the revolutionary decade.
Friday 28th January 2022
6 PM
St Patrick's Gateway Centre