‘THE IRISHMEN OF RUSSIA’—UKRAINIAN ANTI-IMPERIAL STRUGGLES AND ENGAGEMENT WITH IRELAND

By Donnacha Ó Beacháin For centuries neither Ireland nor Ukraine was on the world map but rather they were provinces or sub-units within the imperial structures that had conquered their peoples militarily. Britain and Russia feared that Ireland and Ukraine respectively would be used as a base for foreign attack, and this provided one of … Read more

HURTLING TOWARDS THE PAST—TOURISM, HISTORY AND THE RAILWAY IN MID-NINETEENTH-CENTURY IRELAND

By Clare O’Halloran ‘The stupendous power of steam has, within a very few years, annihilated all previous calculations of time and space.’ The sentiment of this breathless opening line of an all-but-forgotten 1844 history of Drogheda by the barrister and historian John D’Alton was a commonplace of the early age of steam transportation and especially … Read more

KINDRED LINES: VALUATION OFFICE ARCHIVES 1830–65

By Fiona Fitzsimons The Valuation Office Archives have an unparalleled coverage of 100% of all households in rural districts, falling to 65% in urban parishes, with evidence on living conditions, housing, employment, land tenure and land ownership. These records are the backbone of family and local history research in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Ireland. The Valuation … Read more