GUINNESS IS GOOD FOR YOU

By Saskia Vermeulen A successful advert doesn’t solely sell a product. It can, decades later, transport us back in time and reveal cultural and historical nuances about the past. The Guinness Archive has partnered with the IFI Irish Film Archive to release the largest publicly available collection of brand advertising in Ireland and the UK. … Read more

ANTIQUARIANS ON THE HILL OF UISNEACH

By Angus Mitchell ‘Where does Irish history begin?’ was the title of an essay published by Eoin MacNeill in 1904. This was an easy question to ask but harder to answer, and one that he spent much of his academic career elucidating. One acknowledged beginning might be traced through the temporal and spatial dreamtime of … Read more

ULYSSES AS HISTORY

By Daniel Mulhall In the opening episode of Ulysses at the Martello tower in Sandycove, we tap into Stephen Dedalus’s exchange with the Hibernophile Englishman Haines, in which Stephen describes himself as a subject of two masters, ‘the imperial British state’ and ‘the holy Roman catholic and apostolic church’. And, he adds sourly, ‘a third … Read more

BIRR CASTLE, CO. OFFALY

By Damian Murphy Birr Castle is superficially a nineteenth-century creation in the Gothic Revival style and, as home to the Parsons family since 1620, it is one of the very few large country houses in Ireland still occupied by direct descendants of its original builder. It can, however, trace its origins back to the thirteenth … Read more

THE 1865 COUNTY LOUTH GENERAL ELECTION AND THE INTERVENTION OF A DABBLER

By Brian Hopkins By the 1860s, Ireland was emerging from the devastation of the Great Hunger into an era of relative agricultural prosperity for some that coincided with a revival of Anglo-Irish landlordism. Support for or against landlords became increasingly more pronounced in elections to two-member seats during this decade. Tenant farmers were generally not … Read more