Parnell, Redmond, Joyce and Griffith
James Joyce, an admirer of Arthur Griffith, thought the Irish Parliamentary Party was bankrupt. The Irish had destroyed Parnell, and now their main political party were mere tools of John Bull.
James Joyce, an admirer of Arthur Griffith, thought the Irish Parliamentary Party was bankrupt. The Irish had destroyed Parnell, and now their main political party were mere tools of John Bull.
In 1843 an elderly member of Dublin Corporation reminded his colleagues of the mercantile wealth that the city enjoyed in the decades before the Act of Union.
Tom Kelly, a Dublin alderman, in 1909 lamented the huge change that had come over Dublin’s Liberties since the passing of the Act of Union.
Gallant visitor also commends ‘serenely beautiful’ scenery and grace and generosity of natives
There are many theories about the gradual decline of the Protestant community in Ireland. Some of them draw on clear evidence.
When money’s tight and hard to get and your horse has also ran, when all you have is a heap of debt …
A period of panic in the 1960s following the collapse of some tenement buildings led to a process that saw the destruction of much of Dublin’s architectural heritage.
The Conroys and the Blooms had something in common: a stranger, in one case a dead one, had wandered into their marriage. They also tended to wander into each other’s books.
A German traveller’s account of a visit he made to Dublin in 1850 reveals much about the politics and economics of being pretty and the life of a poor girl in Victorian Dublin
Fionn Mac Cumhaill was well remembered until quite recently for his many exploits not too far off the route of the 65b from Hawkins Street