Irish Food History with Three Castles Burning

Royal Irish Academy 19 Dawson St, Dublin 2, Dublin

**Apologies, registration full** The Royal Irish Academy will host a live recording of Three Castles Burning, a social history podcast created and hosted by Donal Fallon. The episode will feature...

Cathy Scuffil unravels the story of The Dolphin’s Barn Brick Company

Dolphin's Barn Library Parnell Rd, Saint James' (part of Phoenix Park), Dublin, Ireland

Join Dublin City Historian in Residence Cathy Scuffil, as she unravels the story behind the Dolphin’s Barn Brick Company and the people associated with it. The company was located on the Crumlin Road from the 1890s until 1944 with the clay pits extending from Kimmage to the Grand Canal at Goldenbridge. The brickworks were a...

The records of Dublin’s lost railway companies

Richmond Barracks Dublin 8, Dublin

Within the archives of CIÉ are the records of most of the former railway companies of Ireland who operated the railway lines that criss-crossed the country from the 1830s up...

History of Cantonese Diaspora in Ireland

Online

ONLINE TALK Explore the Cantonese diaspora in Ireland. This event will delve into the experiences, challenges, and contributions of the Cantonese-speaking community in Ireland. Hear personal stories, cultural insights, and...

A Polish migrant in 20th Century Dublin: three years in the life of Stasko Markiewicz.

Pearse Street Library 144 Pearse Street, Dublin 2, Dublin, Ireland

Patrick Quigley will explore how Stanislaw (Stasko) Markiewicz, son of Casimir and stepson of Countess Markievicz, stayed in Dublin at three critical stages of his life. He had a happy childhood in Rathgar before leaving Dublin for Ukraine in 1915, returned to comfort the Countess on her deathbed in 1927 and emigrated from Poland to...

Centenary of the Irish Courts, 1924-2024

House of Lords, Bank of Ireland Bank of Ireland 2 College Green, Dublin 2, Dublin

The Irish State came into existence on 6 December 1922. At this time the creation of a new system of courts remained unfinished business. In January 1923 a Judiciary Committee was appointed to advise the Irish government on the establishment of a new court system. Its report was followed by the enactment of the Courts...

Forfeited estates of 1688 in Ireland: an account from 1702-1703

The Edward Worth Library The Edward Worth Library Dr Steevens' Hospital, Dublin, Dublin

Dr Paul G. Smith (Independent Scholar and former Bríd McGrath Research Fellow) will present a lecture on 'Forfeited estates of 1688 in Ireland: an account of the late proprietors and the purchasers; 1702-1703.' This is the Brendan Prendiville Memorial Lecture. Note: Booking required, email info@edwardworthlibrary.ie

Belfast: The Story of a City and its People

Online

ONLINE TALK Modern Belfast is a beautiful city with a vibrant tradition of radicalism, industry, architectural innovation, and cultural achievement. But the city’s many qualities are all too frequently overlooked, its image marred by association with the political violence of the Troubles. Feargal Cochrane tells the story of his home city, revealing a rich and...

Mick O’Dea in Conversation

14 Henrietta Street Dublin 1, Dublin

The story of Henrietta Street is the story not only of architectural and political history, but the arts. When campaigner Uinseann MacEoin saved a number of Henrietta Street homes in the 1960s and ‘70s, it began a process of revitalisation that drew artists to the street. Mick O’Dea, past president of the Royal Hibernian Academy,...

‘A Great Daily Organ’ the Freeman’s Journal, 1763-1924

Dublin City Library & Archive Pearse Street Library 144 Pearse Street, Dublin, Dublin

This lecture marks the centenary of the closure of the Freeman’s Journal which appeared for the last time on 19 December 1924. Founded in 1763 as the organ of the so-called ‘patriot’ opposition in the Irish parliament, it was the principal Irish nationalist daily paper in the nineteenth century. For 50 years, from 1841 to...

Animal City: Dublin in the 19th and 20th Centuries

Ballymun Library Ballymun Road, Dublin 11, Dublin

Let historian Juliana Adelman and geographer Ann Marie Durkan show you a different side to Dublin as they tell stories of Dublin’s animal past. Covering approximately 100 years of history, they will follow the once prevalent pigs, cattle and horses through city streets revealing a history full of forgotten sights, smells and sounds. Juliana Adelman...

From Sackville to O’Connell

Central Library Ilac Centre Henry St, Dublin 1, Dublin

Dublin City Historian in Residence, Elizabeth Kehoe will be giving a talk about O’Connell Street based on people's memories and historical records so this will be an eclectic mix about the capital’s main street. This year marks the 100th year anniversary of the naming of this iconic street. Note: Limited spaces, booking essential.

Fingal Deaths during the First World War

Blanchardstown Library The Civic Centre Blanchardstown Centre, Blanchardstown, Dublin

Approximately 210,000 Irishmen volunteered for the British Forces between 1914 and 1918; of these, around 35,000 died, with over 6,000 of these from Dublin. This talk will tell the story of Fingal natives who died during the Great War and illustrate the complex relationship between Ireland and the British military. Dr. Bernard Kelly completed his...

Marlborough House – State Collusion With Abuse 1944 to 1972

Drumcondra Library Millmount Avenue Drumcondra, Dublin, Dublin

**Apologies, registration full** In the mid-1940s Marlborough House was set up by the Department of Education as a place of detention for young boys. It was the only centre of its type managed directly by the Department of Education, but it was also registered by the Minister for Justice as a Place of Detention. In...

Fleapits, Palaces and Multiplexes: A History of Dublin Cinemas

Donaghmede Library Donaghmede Shopping Centre Grange Rd, Dublin 13, Dublin

**Apologies, registration full** Join Dublin City Historian in Residence, Katie Blackwood, for an illustrated talk on the history of Dublin cinemas that takes the audience through the early days of makeshift venues, the golden age of cinema building, and right up to the emergence of the multiplexes of the 1990s. Incorporating architecture, censorship, queuing, courting...