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Roinn Cosanta. Bureau of Military
ROINN COSANTA. BUREAU OF MILITARY HISTORY, 1913-21. STATEMENT BY WITNESS DOCUMENT NO. W.S. 651 Witness Diarmuid Lynch, Tracton, Ballyfeard, Co. Cork. Identity. Member of Supreme Council of I.R.B. 1916. Subject. The Countermanding Orders of Holy Week, 1916. Conditions, if any, Stipulated by Witness. Nil File No. S.3o Form B.S.M.2 The Countermanding Orders of Holy Week, 1916. The attached eight-page printed document entitled: "The Countermanding Orders of Holy Week 1916" by Diarmuid Lynch is a printer's proof. The article was written, by Diarmuid Lynch early in 1947 for publication in An Cosantoir. It was, it the first instance, submitted by the Editor of An Cosantoir to Mr. Bulmer Hobson for his comments. Mr. Hobson, who was intimately connected with the incidents covered by the article, and whose name is frequently mentioned therein, replied to the effect that "statements about myself and about certain other matters just do not happen to be true". In view of all the cicumstances, the Editor decided to postpone publication of the article and forwarded copies of it together with Mr. Hobson's original letter to the Bureau for inclusion in our archives. Mr. Hobson's letter is registered under No. W.S.652. D. Connolly KEEPER OF RECORDS 29 Feb 1952 The Countermanding Orders Of Holy Week 1916 by DIARMUID LYNCH. THAT part of the articleon Comman whereby they might he "secured." dant TomásMacCurtainpublishedin Somepeopleconstruedthem as meaning the February, is issue of AN defenceof the anticipated"Home Rule" COSANTÓIRwhich dealt with the failure position-to opposewhich the Carsonite of the.Cork Brigadeto participatein the Volunteershad beenorganisedpreviously Easter Week Rising suggests two in the North. -
Bishop Streetstreet Photographicphotographic Recordrecord
LIVINGLIVING CITYCITY PROJECTPROJECT BISHOPBISHOP STREETSTREET PHOTOGRAPHICPHOTOGRAPHIC RECORDRECORD Supported by Derry City Council Prepared byPrehen Studios Prehen House, Londonderry/Derry Foyle Civic Trust 4-8 Bishop Street Living City Project Map Reference 01 Address 4-8 Bishop Street Name None Map Reference 01 Plot Number 53,54 Listed Building No Reference N/A Grade N/A Conservation Area Yes Reference Historic City Building at Risk No Reference N/A Date of Construction Original Use Retail Present Use Retail Description Two-storey, three-bay building with curtain walling system to front elevation. Flat roof concealed behind parapet. Contemporary shopfronts. Owners/Tenants 1832 Thomas Mulholland 1858 Mulholland & Co. 1871 Joseph Mulholland 1879-1918 Mulholland & Co. 2006 Celtic Collection, Barnardo’s Derry Almanac 1 Foyle Civic Trust 4-8 Bishop Street Living City Project Map Reference 01 Archive Articles (continued) 2 Foyle Civic Trust 4-8 Bishop Street Living City Project Map Reference 01 The Londonderry Sentinel, 25 January 1879 The Londonderry Sentinel, 1879 3 Foyle Civic Trust 4-8 Bishop Street Living City Project Map Reference 01 Derry Almanac, 1889 Derry Almanac, 1903 4 Foyle Civic Trust 4-8 Bishop Street Living City Project Map Reference 01 Mulholland’s, 6-8 Bishop Street 5 Foyle Civic Trust 4-8 Bishop Street Living City Project Map Reference 01 Archive Images Mulholland’s, from the Diamond, circa 1930 6 Foyle Civic Trust 10 Bishop Street Living City Project Map Reference 02 Address 10 Bishop Street Name None Map Reference 02 Plot Number 52 Listed Building No Reference N/A Grade N/A Conservation Area Yes Reference Historic City Building at Risk No Reference N/A Date of Construction Original Use Retail/Office Present Use Retail/Office Description Three-storey, four bay, smooth rendered façade, natural slate roof. -
Fleming-The-Book-Of-Armagh.Pdf
THE BOOK OF ARMAGH BY THE REV. CANON W.E.C. FLEMING, M.A. SOMETIME INCUMBENT OF TARTARAGHAN AND DIAMOND AND CHANCELLOR OF ARMAGH CATHEDRAL 2013 The eighth and ninth centuries A.D. were an unsettled period in Irish history, the situation being exacerbated by the arrival of the Vikings1 on these shores in 795, only to return again in increasing numbers to plunder and wreak havoc upon many of the church settlements, carrying off and destroying their treasured possessions. Prior to these incursions the country had been subject to a long series of disputes and battles, involving local kings and chieftains, as a result of which they were weakened and unable to present a united front against the foreigners. According to The Annals of the Four Masters2, under the year 800 we find, “Ard-Macha was plundered thrice in one month by the foreigners, and it had never been plundered by strangers before.” Further raids took place on at least seven occasions, and in 941 they record, “Ard-Macha was plundered by the same foreigners ...” It is, therefore, rather surprising that in spite of so much disruption in various parts of the country, there remained for many people a degree of normality and resilience in daily life, which enabled 1 The Vikings, also referred to as Norsemen or Danes, were Scandinavian seafarers who travelled overseas in their distinctive longships, earning for themselves the reputation of being fierce warriors. In Ireland their main targets were the rich monasteries, to which they returned and plundered again and again, carrying off church treasures and other items of value. -
The Ulster Women's Unionist Council and Ulster Unionism
“No Idle Sightseers”: The Ulster Women’s Unionist Council and Ulster Unionism (1911-1920s) Pamela Blythe McKane A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY GRADUATE PROGRAM IN POLITICAL SCIENCE YORK UNIVERSITY TORONTO, ONTARIO JANUARY 2015 ©Pamela Blythe McKane 2015 Abstract Title: “No Idle Sightseers”: The Ulster Women’s Unionist Council and Ulster Unionism (1911-1920s) This doctoral dissertation examines the Ulster Women’s Unionist Council (UWUC), an overlooked, but historically significant Ulster unionist institution, during the 1910s and 1920s—a time of great conflict. Ulster unionists opposed Home Rule for Ireland. World War 1 erupted in 1914 and was followed by the Anglo-Irish War (1919- 1922), the partition of Ireland in 1922, and the Civil War (1922-1923). Within a year of its establishment the UWUC was the largest women’s political organization in Ireland with an estimated membership of between 115,000 and 200,000. Yet neither the male- dominated Ulster unionist institutions of the time, nor the literature related to Ulster unionism and twentieth-century Irish politics and history have paid much attention to its existence and work. This dissertation seeks to redress this. The framework of analysis employed is original in terms of the concepts it combines with a gender focus. It draws on Rogers Brubaker’s (1996) concepts of “nation” as practical category, institutionalized form (“nationhood”), and contingent event (“nationness”), combining these concepts with William Walters’ (2004) concept of “domopolitics” and with a feminist understanding of the centrality of gender to nation. -
Official Handbook 2019/2020 Title Partner Official Kit Partner
OFFICIAL HANDBOOK 2019/2020 TITLE PARTNER OFFICIAL KIT PARTNER PREMIUM PARTNERS PARTNERS & SUPPLIERS MEDIA PARTNERS www.leinsterrugby.ie | From The Ground Up COMMITTEES & ORGANISATIONS OFFICIAL HANDBOOK 2019/2020 Contents Leinster Branch IRFU Past Presidents 2 COMMITTEES & ORGANISATIONS Leinster Branch Officers 3 Message from the President Robert Deacon 4 Message from Bank of Ireland 6 Leinster Branch Staff 8 Executive Committee 10 Branch Committees 14 Schools Committee 16 Womens Committee 17 Junior Committee 18 Youths Committee 19 Referees Committee 20 Leinster Rugby Referees Past Presidents 21 Metro Area Committee 22 Midlands Area Committee 24 North East Area Committee 25 North Midlands Area Committee 26 South East Area Committee 27 Provincial Contacts 29 International Union Contacts 31 Committee Meetings Diary 33 COMPETITION RESULTS European, UK & Ireland 35 Leagues In Leinster, Cups In Leinster 39 Provincial Area Competitions 40 Schools Competitions 43 Age Grade Competitions 44 Womens Competitions 47 Awards Ball 48 Leinster Rugby Charity Partners 50 FIXTURES International 51 Heineken Champions Cup 54 Guinness Pro14, Celtic Cup 57 Leinster League 58 Seconds League 68 Senior League 74 Metro League 76 Energia All Ireland League 89 Energia Womens AIL League 108 CLUB & SCHOOL INFORMATION Club Information 113 Schools Information 156 www.leinsterrugby.ie 1 OFFICIAL HANDBOOK 2019/2020 COMMITTEES & ORGANISATIONS Leinster Branch IRFU Past Presidents 1920-21 Rt. Rev. A.E. Hughes D.D. 1970-71 J.F. Coffey 1921-22 W.A. Daish 1971-72 R. Ganly 1922-23 H.J. Millar 1972-73 A.R. Dawson 1923-24 S.E. Polden 1973-74 M.H. Carroll 1924-25 J.J. Warren 1974-75 W.D. -
Bibliography
BIbLIOGRApHY PRIMARY SOURCEs: ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS BODLEIAN LIbRARY, OXFORD H. H. Asquith BRITIsH LIbRARY Walter Long CLAYDON EsTATE, BUCKINGHAMsHIRE Harry Verney IRIsH MILITARY ARCHIVEs Bureau of Military History Contemporary Documents Bureau of Military History Witness Statements (http://www.bureauofmilitaryhis- tory.ie) Michael Collins George Gavan Duffy © The Author(s) 2019 305 M. C. Rast, Shaping Ireland’s Independence, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-21118-9 306 BIblIOgraPhY NATIONAL ARCHIVEs OF IRELAND Dáil Éireann Debates (http://oireachtas.ie) Dáil Éireann Documents Department of the Taoiseach Documents on Irish Foreign Policy (printed and http://www.difp.ie) NATIONAL LIbRARY OF IRELAND G. F. Berkeley Joseph Brennan Bryce Erskine Childers George Gavan Duffy T. P. Gill J. J. Hearn Thomas Johnson Shane Leslie Monteagle Maurice Moore Kathleen Napoli McKenna Art Ó Briain William O’Brien (AFIL) J. J. O’Connell Florence O’Donoghue Eoin O’Duffy Horace Plunkett John Redmond Austin Stack NEW YORK PUbLIC LIbRARY Horace Plunkett, The Irish Convention: Confidential Report to His Majesty the King by the Chairman (1918). PUbLIC RECORD OFFICE NORTHERN IRELAND J. B. Armour J. Milne Barbour Edward Carson Craigavon (James Craig) BIblIOgraPhY 307 Adam Duffin Frederick Crawford H. A. Gwynne Irish Unionist Alliance Theresa, Lady Londonderry Hugh de Fellenberg Montgomery Northern Ireland Cabinet Ulster Unionist Council Unionist Anti-Partition League Lillian Spender Wilfrid B. Spender The Stormont Papers: Northern Ireland Parliamentary Debates (http://stor- -
O'brien Cahirmoyle LIST 64
Leabharlann Naisiúnta na hÉireann National Library of Ireland Collection List No. 64 PAPERS OF THE FAMILY OF O’BRIEN OF CAHIRMOYLE, CO. LIMERICK (MSS 34,271-34,277; 34,295-34,299; 36,694-36,906) (Accession No. 5614) Papers of the descendents of William Smith O’Brien, including papers of the painter Dermod O’Brien and his wife Mabel Compiled by Peter Kenny, 2002-2003 Contents Introduction 7 The family 7 The papers 7 Bibliography 8 I. Land tenure 9 I.1. Altamira, Co. Cork 9 I.2 Ballybeggane 9 I.3. Bawnmore 9 I.4. Cahirmoyle 9 I.5. Clanwilliam (Barony) 11 I.6. Clorane 11 I.7. The Commons, Connello Upper 11 I.8. Connello (Barony) 11 I.9. Coolaleen 11 I.10. Cork City, Co. Cork 11 I.11. Dromloghan 12 I.12. Garrynderk 12 I.13. Glanduff 12 I.14. Graigue 12 I.15. Killagholehane 13 I.16. Kilcoonra 12 I.17. Killonahan 13 I.18. Killoughteen 13 I.19. Kilmurry (Archer) 14 I.20. Kilscannell 15 I.21. Knockroedermot 16 I.22. Ligadoon 16 I.23. Liscarroll, Co. Cork 18 I.24. Liskillen 18 I.25. Loghill 18 I.26. Mount Plummer 19 I.27. Moyge Upper, Co. Cork 19 I.28. Rathgonan 20 2 I.29. Rathnaseer 21 I.30. Rathreagh 22 I.31. Reens 22 I.32 Correspondence etc. relating to property, finance and legal matters 23 II. Family Correspondence 25 II.1. Edward William O’Brien to his sister, Charlotte Grace O’Brien 25 II.2. Edward William O’Brien to his sister, Lucy Josephine Gwynn (d. -
Book Auction Catalogue
1. 4 Postal Guide Books Incl. Ainmneacha Gaeilge Na Mbail Le Poist 2. The Scallop (Studies Of A Shell And Its Influence On Humankind) + A Shell Book 3. 2 Irish Lace Journals, Embroidery Design Book + A Lace Sampler 4. Box Of Pamphlets + Brochures 5. Lot Travel + Other Interest 6. 4 Old Photograph Albums 7. Taylor: The Origin Of The Aryans + Wilson: English Apprenticeship 1603-1763 8. 2 Scrap Albums 1912 And Recipies 9. Victorian Wildflowers Photograph Album + Another 10. 2 Photography Books 1902 + 1903 11. Wild Wealth – Sears, Becker, Poetker + Forbeg 12. 3 Illustrated London News – Cornation 1937, Silver Jubilee 1910-1935, Her Magesty’s Glorious Jubilee 1897 13. 3 Meath Football Champions Posters 14. Box Of Books – History Of The Times etc 15. Box Of Books Incl. 3 Vols Wycliff’s Opinion By Vaughan 16. Box Books Incl. 2 Vols Augustus John Michael Holroyd 17. Works Of Canon Sheehan In Uniform Binding – 9 Vols 18. Brendan Behan – Moving Out 1967 1st Ed. + 3 Other Behan Items 19. Thomas Rowlandson – The English Dance Of Death 1903. 2 Vols. Colour Plates 20. W.B. Yeats. Sophocle’s King Oedipis 1925 1st Edition, Yeats – The Celtic Twilight 1912 And Yeats Introduction To Gitanjali 21. Flann O’Brien – The Best Of Myles 1968 1st Ed. The Hard Life 1973 And An Illustrated Biography 1987 (3) 22. Ancient Laws Of Ireland – Senchus Mor. 1865/1879. 4 Vols With Coloured Lithographs 23. Lot Of Books Incl. London Museum Medieval Catalogue 24. Lot Of Irish Literature Incl. Irish Literature And Drama. Stephen Gwynn A Literary History Of Ireland, Douglas Hyde etc 25. -
D 1KB LI 1^1
.« p..^—»«=.».^»,— » ~-pppf^l^J^P^ :d 1KB LI 1^1 c?-/? mlTeraiiir Cakntrar, /(,'/; uiB y:i:Ai!. 19 06-19 7 Vol. II m. :i,(Mjin:«, FJOiAis, and co,, i,n:,, i;i;Ai' L0>'1>0X. XEW YUEK, AN D 1' • - 1907, ^-'V?^'c«-a?or. vw. ~jun^>c<x-.oiEMMueHlBCdaB9 tiB I tyjwmmwpp Large 8vo, C/ofh. pp. xxvi + 606. Price 70/6 net CATALOGUE MANUSCRIPTS Hibrarp of €rinitp College, SDublin TO WHICH IS ADOKD A LIST OF THE FAGEL COLLECTION OF MAPS IN THE SAME LIBRARY COMPILKD BY T. K. ABBOTT, B.D., D.Litt. (librarian) DUBLIN: HODGES, FIGGIS, AND CO., Limited. LONDON : LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. ['] THE BOOK OF TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN, 1591—1891- Descriptive and Historical Account of the College from its Foundation, with 22 Full-page Plates, and 50 Illustra- tions in the Text, consisting of Views, Plans, and Portraits of Famous Members. CONTENTS. CHAPS. i.-iv. —From the Foundation to the close of the Eighteenth Century. By the Eev. J. P. Mahaffy, d.d. v.— During the Nineteenth Century. By the Eev. J. W. Stubbs, d.d. VI. —The Observatory, Dunsink. By Sir Eobeut Ball, ll.d. VII. —The Library. By the Eev. T. K.Abbott, b.d., litt.d.. Librarian, VIII. —The Early Buildings. By Ulick E. Burke, m.a. IX.—Distinguished Graduates. By "W. M'Neile Dixon, ll.r. X.— The College Plate. By the Eev. J. P. Mahaffy, d.d. XI. —The Botanical Gardens and Herbarium. By E. Perceval Wbioht, M.D. XII. —The University and College Officers, 1892. Ode for the Tercentenary Festival. -
Joseph Maunsell Hone Papers P229 UCD ARCHIVES
Joseph Maunsell Hone Papers P229 UCD ARCHIVES [email protected] www.ucd.ie/archives T + 353 1 716 7555 F + 353 1 716 1146 © 2009 University College Dublin. All Rights Reserved ii CONTENTS CONTEXT Biographical History iv Archival History iv CONTENT AND STRUCTURE Scope and Content v System of Arrangement vi CONDITIONS OF ACCESS AND USE Access vii Language vii Finding Aid vii DESCRIPTION CONTROL Archivist’s Note vii iii CONTEXT Biographical history Born in Dublin in February 1882, Joseph Maunsell Hone was educated at Wellington and Jesus College, Cambridge and began a writing career which gained him a reputation as a leading figure of the Irish literary revival. He wrote well regarded biographies of George Moore (1939), Henry Tonks (1936), and W.B. Yeats (1943) with whom he was on terms of close friendship. His political writings included books on the 1916 rebellion, the Irish Convention, and a history of Ireland since independence, published in 1932. He had a strong interest in philosophy, translating Daniel Halévy’s life of Nietzsche and working with Arland Ussher on an anthology of philosophers which was never completed. He was elected President of the Irish Academy of Letters in 1957. With George Roberts and Stephen Gwynn, he co-founded Maunsel & Company, publishers, and served as its chairman. The company published more than five hundred titles to become Ireland’s largest publishing house, publishing works by all the revival’s leading figures. The imprint later changed to Maunsel & Roberts. Joseph Hone died in March 1959 and was survived by his wife Vera (neé Brewster), a noted beauty from New York who he had married in 1911. -
Family and Political Correspondence from Calendar Compiled by A
Leabharlann Náisiúnta na hÉireann National Library of Ireland Collection List No. 179 Headfort Estate Papers (Additional) (Mss 42,068, 42,080, 48,541–49,110 & 49,136) (Accessions 3898, 5778, 6126, 6695, 6794, 6816, 6918) Estate records and personal and political papers of the Taylour family, Marquesses of Headfort, ca. 1600–1980. Compiled by: Brian Casey, B.A., Ph.D., holder of the Studentship in Irish History provided by the National Library of Ireland in association with the Irish Committee of Historical Sciences, 2010–2011, Avice-Claire McGovern, Department of Manuscripts, Eimear Walsh, Department of Manuscripts, with assistance from Nora Thornton, Department of Manuscripts 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction....................................................................................................................... 7 Overview of the Headfort estate collection................................................................... 10 Pedigree of Taylour family ............................................................................................. 14 I. Estate Accounts............................................................................................................ 16 I.i. Labour Accounts and Bills ....................................................................................... 16 I.i.1. Headfort Estate and Farm, County Meath............................................................ 16 I.i.1.a. 1795-1887...................................................................................................... 16 -
The Banshee's Kiss: Conciliation, Class and Conflict in Cork and The
The Banshee’s Kiss: Conciliation, Class and Conflict in Cork and the All for Ireland League. Thesis submitted in accordance with the requirements of the University of Liverpool for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Patrick Joseph Murphy. August 2019 1 The Banshee’s Kiss: Conciliation, Class and Conflict in Cork and the All for Ireland League. ABSTRACT Historians have frequently portrayed constitutional nationalism as being homogeneous - ‘the Home Rule movement’- after the reunification of the Irish parliamentary party in 1900. Yet there were elements of nationalist heterodoxy all over the country, but it was only in Cork where dissent took an organised form in the only formal breakaway from the Irish party when the All for Ireland League (A.F.I.L.) was launched in 1910. The AFIL took eight of the nine parliamentary seats in Cork and gained control of local government in the city and county the following year. Existing historical accounts do not adequately explain why support for the Home Rule movement collapsed in Cork, but also why the AFIL flourished there but failed, despite the aspiration of its name, to expand beyond its regional base. The AFIL is chiefly remembered for its visionary policy of conciliation with unionists following the Damascene conversion of its leader William O’Brien, transformed from the enemy of the landed classes to an apostle of a new kind of bi- confessional politics. This would, he claimed, end the ‘Banshee’s Kiss’, a cycle of conflict in which each new generation attempts to achieve Irish freedom. However, conciliation was a policy which was unpopular with both nationalists and unionists and O’Brien therefore needed to develop an electoral base by other means with more popular policies.