PEWTER CUP

Sir,—I know that History Ireland is not the Antiques Road Show, but perhaps your magazine could, through your letters page, ask its readers about this pewter cup (210mm high and 13mm wide). It was found in 1961 in the River Corrib as it leaves Galway. The images seem to show a foreign battle and African … Read more

‘CHAMPION OF THE SLAVES’

Sir,—It is said that ‘appearances can be deceiving’, and with the full-page picture of the Marquess of Sligo opposite an article entitled ‘Ireland and the “£20 Million Swindle”’ (HI 29.3, May/June 2021) such appears to be the case. On the passing of the Abolition of Slavery Act in August 1833, as the owner of two … Read more

PATRICK MAUME AND REVISIONISM

Sir,—In his Platform piece, ‘Understanding our own ignorance’ (HI 29.2, March/April 2021), Dr Patrick Maume writes: ‘John Regan’s recent article on Peter Hart and Kilmichael (HI 28.6, Nov./Dec. 2021) … in demanding that no historical narrative should be written until every detail could be proven, unconsciously illustrates the limits of empiricism as methodology and why … Read more

BITE-SIZED HISTORY

BY TONY CANAVAN Irish father of the Suez Canal It is a little-known fact that Francis Rawdon Chesney, born in Annalong, Co. Down, in 1789, formulated the original plan for the Suez Canal. Chesney was an officer in the Royal Artillery, rising to the rank of general. In 1829 he was sent on a mission … Read more