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Features

‘The first white man to visit America’—St Brendan in the nineteenth century

By William Ward In considering its historical effects, the original nature of a text is at times immaterial. That the Navigatio sancti Brendani abbatis, the early medieval tale of St Brendan’s voyage, ‘is not an AAA triptik to the New World’, as the Connecticut schoolteacher and scholar John D. Anderson put it in 1988, has … Read more

Categories Features, Issue 5 (September/October 2021), Volume 29

Snapshot of a parish before the Famine

An analysis of the 1833 tithe records of Derrygrath, Co. Tipperary. By John Keating The tithe records for the civil parish of Derrygrath, South Tipperary, account for 3,713 of the 3,777-acre map area (cottages on under one acre are not recorded). The records were compiled in 1833 and include details on the size and cropping … Read more

Categories Features, Issue 5 (September/October 2021), Volume 29

The commissioning of Gordan O’Neill

By Colum Kenny In a small village in the Pyrenees they handed me a faded manuscript. The French owners of the house at Gouaux (as high as the top of Ireland’s highest mountain) had found it among papers in their library. Unfolding it gingerly, I saw first the signature of Richard Nagle, attorney-general of Ireland … Read more

Categories Features, Issue 5 (September/October 2021), Volume 29

Swift Nix (Nicks)—an English highwayman and his Irish career

By Amy L. Harris Thomas Dingley (Dineley), an English antiquarian, visited Ireland in 1680–1. In his journal he recorded Swift Nicks (Nix) as one of eight army captains whom he met in Limerick. A literature search finds ‘Swift Nicks/Nix’ classed as a nickname associated with the English highwayman John Nevison, who lived in the latter … Read more

Categories Features, Issue 5 (September/October 2021), Volume 29

Spanish Armada wrecks on the Irish coast

By John Miles La Trinidad Valencera of the Spanish Armada was in trouble. The ship weighed 1,000 tons and had a complement of 360 men. She was leaking badly and had taken on more water than could be pumped out. Nevertheless, as she approached the Irish coast, she managed to rescue 264 men from another … Read more

Categories Features, Issue 5 (September/October 2021), Volume 29
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