Rooted in the rich soil of Ireland's heartland, Farming in the Midlands offers a vivid, multi-lay...
John Armstrong takes us on a railway journey from Kingsbridge Station in Dublin to Waterford and ...
This book seeks to highlight some of the difficult imperial histories and legacies embedded in th...
A visual history of the objects and artifacts that have shaped Ireland's military history. In the...
This beautifully illustrated work examines the career and work of watercolor painter Mildred Anne...
Explores the architectural heritage of Medieval Dublin in an accessible, illustrated volume for g...
This book uncovers the remarkable transformation of Dublin 7's Navan Road parish over three centu...
'Midwives and Fairies: The Folklore of Childbirth in Ireland and Great Britain' is based on exten...
From the privileged world of the Luttrells of Luttrellstown to the blood-soaked politics of rebel...
Burncourt is a rural area in Co. Tipperary. The name derives from the burning of the Everard Mans...
In September 1939 the Second World War broke out. The fact that Ireland remained neutral in the c...
The RMS Lusitania was the largest and fastest ocean-going liner in the world when built in 1912 -...
In the thousand years of Dublin history no period of expansion comes anywhere near that of the pe...
Covid-19 changed how we see ourselves in the world. The pandemic brought loss and uncertainty, bu...
On June 18, 1875, a devastating fire broke out in a whiskey warehouse in the Liberties, Dublin. T...
Taking the reader on a journey from north to south and from mountains to manor houses, this beaut...
Theobald Walsh of Carrickmines had not intended to defend his castle. The commander of the besieg...
This collection of essays ranges over the centuries, from the concept of marriage in early Irish ...
A compilation of the authors' 'Know your monuments' articles for Archaeology Ireland magazine, wh...
A compilation assembled to shed light on Ireland's agricultural and rural past. It does not prete...
The author reviews and contextualizes the extraordinarily rich diversity of manuscripts and print...
This extensive work begins with the Ulster Plantation in Fermanagh and deals with all the major h...
The IRA Volunteers of County Clare were pioneers of the tactics of guerrilla warfare. In 1919, wi...
The urban area of Tralee is medieval in origin, while the surrounding countryside has a rich and ...
Over the past number of years there has been an increasing desire among communities to engage dir...
A catalog of gate lodges in Munster, Ireland. The book is fully indexed and has many illustration...
A collection of studies on the history of Gaelic Ireland covering the 12th to 17th centuries. The...
The Town in Medieval Ireland: In the Light of Recent Archaeological Excavations is the sixth volu...
An inventory and history of gatekeeper's houses in Leinster, Ireland. Over 3,136 gate lodges are ...
Lough Gur is one of the richest landscapes of field monuments in Ireland and has been the focus o...
This richly illustrated book offers a fresh perspective on linear earthworks, perhaps the most en...
In July 2006, a highly significant archaeological discovery was made in a bog at Faddan More, Co....
Rural Ireland and its agricultural way of life are emblematic of this country. For most of modern...
The story of the evolution of Irish dairying is inextricably linked with continuous innovation in...
Following the success of Death and the Irish: a Miscellany (2016), and Marriage and the Irish: a ...
The bog in the townland of Edercloon, Co. Longford, first came to archaeological attention in 196...
'During the Irish War of Independence, the British and the Irish sides often reflected one anothe...
The Hugh Lane Gallery and the National Museum of Ireland are co-curating an exhibition to mark th...
Sport and sporting pastimes have always been an important part of life in Cork. What is remarkabl...
The story begins with Mesolithic hunter-gatherers, who foraged in a forested, primeval landscape,...
This book introduces ground-breaking articles on women and the Treaty, the role of Eamon de Valer...
This is the first of a three-volume series dedicated to Dublin Castle and the archaeological exca...
'A gang of police thugs.' 'Renegades and perverted types.' These were just some of the ways in wh...
At the foundation of the State in 1922, Kimmage was just a crossroads (KCR), with farmland all ar...
Ireland has the most cyclical construction sector in Europe, equaled only by Spain. Except for an...
This book is a record of where clay brick was made in the country and how this locally made indig...
In this richly illustrated book, Elliot tells the story of Dublin port's visionary public servant...
New York, 1919. The 'President' of the self-declared Irish Republic, Eamon de Valera, joined repr...