Ireland
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British History section of the BBC History website. Includes articles & content relating to the Normans, the Middle Ages, and the Tudors.
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CELT, the Corpus of Electronic Texts, brings the wealth of Irish literary and historical culture to the Internet, for the use and benefit of everyone worldwide. It has a searchable online database consisting of contemporary and historical texts from many areas, including literature and the other arts.
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The Celtic Studies Associatio n of North America (CSANA) embraces all aspects of Celtic Studies and provides the kind of forum that is unavailabl e in any discipline - or area-based organizati on. Our members are interested in the languages, literature , history, folklore, music, art and archaeolog y of ancient, medieval and modern Celtic cultures. We have members interested in Wales, Ireland, Scotland, Brittany, Cornwall and the continenta l Celts.
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Early Medieval Ireland [EMI] is a moderated forum for the discussion of topics relating to the history and archaeology of Early Medieval Ireland, c.400AD - c.1200AD. Related subjects such as post-Roman European history, late iron age Ireland, are acceptable where they bear some relevance to the core purpose of the list.
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These links connect to Western European primary historical documents that are transcribed, reproduced in facsimile, or translated. They shed light on key historical happenings within the respective countries and within the broadest sense of political, economic, social and cultural history. The order of documents is chronological wherever possible. These open access sources are readily available to all -- without fees or subscriptions.
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Ireland in the Early Middle Ages acquired a rich and varied range of post-Classical literature, and enjoyed a reputation second to none in terms of scholarship in Greek and Latin, astronomy and mathematics. The Foundations of Irish Culture AD 600-850 project will establish in a scholarly and scientific way the contribution of Irish learning to the development of early medieval Europe.
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Includes Spencer's letters from the 1580s, A Vewe of the Present State of Ireland, and other resources, including a word-list and a 16th century dictionary of Chaucerian vocabulary.
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A guide to Irish archaeology both for the interested layman and the professional archaeologist.
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Irish Archaeology [IrArch] is a moderated forum for the discussion of topics relating to the archaeology of Ireland of all periods. Related subjects such as anthropology, historic geography, history etc. are acceptable where they bear some relevance to the core purpose of the list.
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The Irish Post-Medie val Archaeolog y Group seeks to promote amongst academics and the general public a greater understand ing of Ireland 9;s post-1550A D archaeolog y, history and material culture. It also seeks to promote a holistic approach to this material by means of greater co-operati on with persons working in related fields of study.
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Brief histories of selected towns and cities in the UK and Ireland.
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A searchable bibliography of texts -- from private letters, wills, and household accounts to literary works, philosophical treatises, chronicles, court proceedings, church records, and a host of other documents -- that were written in the Middle Ages and are now available in printed or online editions and translations. The aim is to provide annotated entries that include information on the genre, contents, archival reference and original language of the text, as well as whether the publication includes a translation, introduction, appendices, glossary, and index. Where appropriate, the bibliography also includes hyperlinks to sources that are online.
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In the case of Ireland, Peritia sees the vernacular and Latin traditions, usually separated by disciplinary boundaries, as expressions of a single cultural entity. It publishes on all medieval periods but it has tended to concentrate on the earlier middle ages and has devoted very considerable space to law, hagiography, palaeography, computistics, institutional history, literary history, and art and archaeology.
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The EUL copy is unique in having a complete set of the woodcut plates, which provide important illustrati ons of Irish costume and custom and of English military gear of the late 16th century. Like a strip cartoon, the plates tell the story of the subjugatio n of the Irish rebels by Sir Henry Sidney, Lord-Deput y of Ireland under Queen Elizabeth of England.
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How did the inhabitants of the island of Britain think of themselves in the five and a half centuries between 1066 and 1603? Did they see themselves as British, or as English, Scottish or Welsh? Or was a local identity more important? And what did English dominance mean for Ireland and France, which had never been part of Britain? This exhibition looks at how the governments and people of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales, and of England's French territories, interacted in politics, warfare, religion, trade and everyday life. We hope it will give you insights into the events and forces that influenced ideas of identity, loyalty and nationhood.
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Category Stats
Listings: 19
Regular: 19
Last listing added: 03/07/05
Regular: 19
Last listing added: 03/07/05