Camera Obscura: An exhibition of ‘secret’ photography at Kilmainham Gaol
The Prisoners’ Lens shows theatrical staged scenes which remind us that the events of 1916 were inspired by playwrights and actors as well as poets
An Irish Diary
The Prisoners’ Lens shows theatrical staged scenes which remind us that the events of 1916 were inspired by playwrights and actors as well as poets
His early patronage of the fledgling organisation could not withstand the Kitty O’Shea scandal
Christy Moore’s haunting song immortalised the woman Nancy Spain
Words that were doing a perfectly good job are suddenly deemed to need prefixes
At a museum in Co Laois, volunteers and visitors continue a 200-year-old tradition of white-on-white needlework
A visit to Parisl can be restorative and energising, as it brings to mind so much shared history
Sands would surely have approved of the rap band’s success in helping make Irish fashionable with the young
I had to marvel briefly at its location, on a hilltop bog halfway between Charlestown and nowhere
He assembled a network of activists that hid thousands of fugitives, including many escaped Allied prisoners of war
Natural monolith covered with carvings suggests Croagh Patrick was an object of pilgrimage long before Christianity
A catalogue of 100 colourful expressions, myths, legends and sayings
Fionnuala Ward: Encounter may have been influenced by a podcast about the Loch Ness Monster
There is something military-looking about the birds’ appearance
The Roots author’s follow-up novel Queen traces five generations of a second branch of his ancestry back to a town in Co Monaghan
Festus, from the Latin for ‘joyful’, is a popular boy’s name in Nigeria
His career included playing the part of Dumbledore in the first two Harry Potter movies
From Dublin’s Theatre Royal in 1829 to Wexford’s modern stages, the Italian’s spirit remains woven into Irish operatic history
Sean Corcoran’s idea of recycling cups and plates into an artwork has become a wall sculpture worthy of the Guggenheim
Now it’s just a vestige of evolution, with no apparent function.
Divorced of importance it later acquired, was original War of Independence event worthy of pride?
James Joseph O’Kelly was also, for a brief period, a man of two wives
In keeping with a low-budget production, the movie was projected onto a make-shift screen
O’Connell introduced him as the ‘black O’Connell of the United States’
Myth endures that casts Walter O’Malley as the ultimate sporting villain
Frank McNally: Relationship between Fr John J Duggan and team’s original owner was founded on a misunderstanding
We had only dropped in for the proverbial one drink
When the train pulled into a significant city, they thought they had reached their destination
There may even have been ghosts present, as I was reminded by the attendance of some of my maternal cousins
There were six jukeboxes along the Strand Road in the 1970s, and we flocked to them like moths to a flame
The Irish Times columnist reflects on farming roots, newsroom dramas, and the cost of nostalgia
Like most wars, tariff wars tend to come to an end
Social media and smart phones had not yet taken over our lives
Antti Juho Mäkipaltio was sent to Kilmainham Gaol and Knutsford Prison following GPO surrender
As always, in rough sea conditions I am more than happy to make a holy show of myself
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
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Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices