Memory and history (repeating)

In reviewing the contents of this issue (back to our usual 72 pages, by the way) I was struck by the complex relationship between the related but distinct categories of history and memory. Topics relating to the onging ‘decade of centenaries’ (Terence MacSwiney’s death on hunger strike, pp 32–4, p. 70; the Belfast pogrom, pp … Read more

IRELAND, EMPIRE AND THE SEA

The great voyages of discovery (Columbus, de Gama, etc.) shifted the centre of gravity of European maritime trade from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic. Over the same period the conquest of Ireland was completed. By the eighteenth century, Ireland, for centuries on the periphery of Europe, found itself at the centre of this newly formed … Read more

Terence MacSwiney—martyrdom, civil resistance & the Irish Revolution

This podcast is part of the History Ireland Hedge School programme supported by the Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht under the Decade of Centenaries 2012–2023 initiative. Terence MacSwiney—martyrdom, civil resistance & the Irish Revolution On 25 October 1920, after 74 days on hunger strike, Terence MacSwiney, lord mayor of Cork, died in Brixton Prison. His death … Read more

Cork—crucible of the War of Independence

Why was it that Cork (county and city), which accounted for c. 10% of the country’s population, produced nearly 25% of those killed in the War of Independence? What role did its substantial (c. 10%) non-Catholic (mainly loyalist) population play? Did individual IRA commanders like Tom Barry make a difference and what was the significance of the engagements … Read more