Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Thursday, August 31, 2017

A joint campaign has been launched in the UK by Stena Line and Tourism Ireland which will be seen by over 3 million people.

The new campaign invites people to stir their soul and travel Fishguard-Rosslare to enjoy a short break in Ireland.

Highlighting the country’s Ancient East including counties such as Wexford, Waterford and Kilkenny, the campaign targets the ‘culturally curious’ audience across Britain. The campaign includes radio ads, which will reach over 1.73 million listeners in London, South West England and Wales and online ads.

Diane Poole OBE, Stena Line’s Travel Commercial Manager Irish Sea South said: “Through the launch of this new campaign in association with Tourism Ireland, we hope to inspire people to stir their soul and visit Ireland whilst highlighting the ease of access when travelling by ferry. Through the advertising channels we have invested in, it is expected that over 3 million people will be able to see the promotion of Ireland’s Ancient East.”

Julie Wakley, Tourism Ireland’s Head of Britain added: “We are delighted to partner with Stena Line and Rosslare Europort once again, to maximise the promotion of the Stena Line service from Fishguard to Rosslare. Our aim is to boost car touring visitor numbers to the South East and Ireland over the coming months; visitors who bring their car on holidays tend to stay longer, spend more and are more likely to visit more than one region.”

Joint Campaign Launched in UK to Invite Visitors to Ireland's Ancient East

Monday, June 19, 2017

Details of over 1,500 sites excavated during road and rail building now available online
Details of more than 1,500 archaeological excavations across the Ireland are now freely available online as part of a new initiative launched on Monday at the Royal Irish Academy.
The Transport Infrastructure Ireland (TII) Digital Heritage Collections represent 80 per cent of all excavation reports commissioned by the National Roads Authority and the Railway Procurement Agency during Ireland’s extensive programmes of motorway and light rail building between 2001 and 2016.
The project, a collaboration between TII, the Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI) and the Discovery Programme, makes it possible for anyone to explore Ireland’s archaeological heritage from every time period and region, with sites ranging from the Bronze Age village of Ballybrowney in Co Cork to a Tudor burial discovered outside Trinity College, Dublin, during excavations for the Luas Cross City.
In the course of building the national roads network and the light rail system, TII excavated hundreds of archaeological sites.
“These collections represent the endeavour of numerous archaeologists and site directors, who painstakingly excavated these sites,” said Rónán Swan, Head of Archaeology and Heritage at TII.

“For TII, making this information accessible and available for the long term through the DRI is entirely consistent with our stated objectives.”
The DRI curates, preserves, and provides access to a broad range of Ireland’s humanities and social sciences data.
Its director, Dr Natalie Harrower, said the project was the result of a collaboration between parties with complementary areas of expertise.
“The collections provide an amazing corpus for researchers and general interest browsing, but also, importantly, TII and the Discovery Programme were committed to ensuring long-term preservation, enhanced discovery, and widespread access from the very beginning,” she said.
While the data is held by the DRI, it can also be accessed through a variety of other national and international platforms, including HeritageMaps.ie (an initiative of the Heritage Council).

Online users can browse via semantic search or interactive maps to find what they’re looking for.
Anthony Corns, Technology Manager at the Discovery Programme, whose mission is to explore Ireland’s past and its cultural heritage, said the new initiative was an important step not just in preserving information for researchers but also opening up access to wider audiences.
“Significantly, this means access for local communities across the country to information that relates deeply to their surrounding environment and heritage,” he said.
The data can be accessed through DRI Heritage Maps and IRELAND'S OPEN DATA PORTAL

New archaeology archive makes heritage data freely available

Monday, October 31, 2016

Ιn the Dublin mountains, where Neil Jackman of Abarta Heritage is excavating the remains of suspected Neolithic tomb. The site is located on prominent hill overlooking the city, right beside one of Dublin’s most infamous buildings, the Hell Fire Club. Built in 1725, this large stone structure was once home to a notorious group of 18th century aristocrats who were described by Jonathan Swift as “a brace of Monsters, Blasphemers and Bacchanalians”.


They used this isolated building as base for wild parties, drunken escapades and possibly more malevolent activities. However, by the 19th century the house had fallen into ruin and was now reputedly home to something far more sinister, for according to Dublin folklore, the Hell Fire Club is haunted. Numerous ghostly tales are told about its dark and foreboding rooms and these suggest that the building is haunted by the devil and also by a black, demonic cat.
Thankfully, no sign of any spectres were spotted during the archaeological dig. Instead, the archaeologists have uncovered evidence of a denuded prehistoric cairn. It is thought that this mound may represent the remains of a passage tomb, similar, but smaller in size, to the famous examples found in the Boyne valley, such as Newgrange and Knowth.
Unfortunately, the tomb was badly damaged in the 18th century when the builders of the Hell Fire club used the mound as a source of stone. In Irish folklore destroying ancient monuments is deeply frowned upon as they were believed to be the home of the fairies or Sidhe. Bad luck is meant to follow anyone who commits such an act and it is tempting to link the destruction of the passage tomb with the subsequent belief that the Hell Fire club was haunted.


Undisturbed by ghosts, the archaeological excavation has slowly revealed what the damaged mound may have originally looked like. It now appears that it was built out of layers of earth and stone, which were surrounded by a kerb of large boulders. A hollow near the centre of the mound was most likely occupied by a chamber or passage and this is where the burial remains would have been placed. This area was largely untouched by the current phase of excavation at the Hell Fire Club.


Artefacts recovered from the mound deposits are suggestive of a Neolithic construction date and include pieces of worked flint and a wonderful polished stone axe fragment.
Over the course of the dig the site has been visited by numerous local schools, as well as a constant stream of visitors, all of whom were expertly guided thought the excavation process by Neil Jackman. Indeed, public engagement has been one of the cornerstones of the Hell Fire Project and this is something that should be greatly lauded.

The archaeological dig, which was funded by South Dublin County Council, finished today, just in time for Halloween. However, if you would like to keep abreast of the post-excavation phase, where the artefacts and samples will undergo specialist analysis, you should follow Abarta Heritage’s webpage.


Source http://irisharchaeology.ie

Excavating a Prehistoric Tomb at the Hell Fire Club, Dublin

Monday, May 23, 2016

Cahir Castle (Irish: Caisleán na Cathrach), one of the largest castles in Ireland, is sited on an island in the river Suir. It was built from 1142 by Conor O'Brien, Prince of Thomond. Now situated in Cahir town centre, County Tipperary, the castle is well preserved and has guided tour and audiovisual shows in multiple languages.

The castle was sited on and near an earlier native fortification known as a cathair (stone fort), which gave its name to the place. The core structure of the castle dates to construction in the 13th century by the O'Brien family. The castle was built in two parts, with the side now by the street being built 200 years before the side now housing the audio-visual show.

Granted to the powerful Butler family in late 14th century, the castle was enlarged and remodelled between the 15th and 17th centuries. It fell into ruin in the late 18th century and was partially restored in the 1840s. The Great Hall was partly rebuilt in 1840.

In 1375, the castle was granted to James Butler, newly created Earl of Ormond, for his loyalty to Edward III. His son James, the second Earl (by his second marriage) passed the lands around the barony of Iffa and Offa West to his children, though they were not themselves noble. This changed by 1542 when the first of the Barons Cahir was created. Unlike their Anglican kinsmen, this branch of the Butler dynasty sided with the Roman Catholic Irish in the Elizabethan wars. In 1599 the castle was captured after a three-day siege by the army of the Earl of Essex and was for a year put under the charge of Sir Charles Blount. Lord Cahir joined with the Earl of Tyrone in 1601 and was attainted for treason, but later obtained a full pardon. In 1627 the castle was the scene of a celebrated killing when Cahir's son-in-law, Lord Dunboyne, murdered his distant cousin, James Prendergast, in a dispute over an inheritance: he was tried for the killing but acquitted.

During the Irish Confederate Wars the castle was besieged twice. In 1647 George Mathew, the guardian of the young Lord Cahir, surrendered to Murrough O'Brien, 6th Baron Inchiquin (later 1st Earl, and a descendant of Cahir's builder) following his victory at the battle of Knocknanauss. In 1650 he surrendered again to Oliver Cromwell, during his conquest of Ireland without a shot even being fired.

In 1961 the last Lord Cahir died and the castle reverted to the Irish state.

Cahir Castle

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