by Frances Devlin-Glass Those who have been following Bloomsday for a very long time may remember the palpable thrill of seeing Exiles for the first time in a humble moved reading at Gasworks Theatre (in South Melbourne) twenty years ago in 2003. I was in Japan and unhappily missed it. The audience reported a frisson resembling electricity and surprise … Continue reading
Filed under News …
‘Paris green’ and the story of young Albert Cyril Ashton
By Trevor McClaughlin This entry was posted on April 10, 2023 by Trevor McClaughlin, in Australian-Irish history, Belfast Girls, Irish Australian History, News and tagged ‘a working man’s paradise’?, Albert Cyril Ashton, C.G.Wade, Charles Emanuel Cohen, Crime, Earl Grey ship, Julian Windeyer, Maitland Circuit Court, Mary McConell, R. v Tudor, Richard O’Connor, Thomas Ashton, William Knox Child. Bookmark the permalink. (Edit) This is a story about one of the great-grandchildren of the ‘Earl Grey Irish Famine orphans’. … Continue reading
The Windsor framework: oven-ready fudge
By Jeff Kildea, first published in John Menadue’s Pearls and Irritations. We thank this site for permission to republish. More than three years after Boris Johnson got Brexit done with his ‘excellent’ and ‘oven-ready’ deal, his second successor Rishi Sunak may have actually baked it, but only after changing the recipe from cake to fudge. But is … Continue reading
Grace Gifford: Just Ephemera? A new discovery in Sydney
A Family History Feature by Mary Barthelemy This entry was posted on April 10, 2023 by Tintean Editorial Team/fdg, in News and tagged An Abbey Theatre poster by Grace Gifford, Civil War, Easter rising, Grace Gifford Plunkett, Holy Pictures, Irish culture, Irish history, Joseph Plunkett, Kilmainham Gaol murals, Poverty in Ireland in the nascent Free State, The Sydey-based Amour Brothers on tour in Ireland. Bookmark the permalink. (Edit) In my family archival … Continue reading
A Blacksmith From Limerick in New York
By Mae Leonard I was sick that day. Sick of New York. I’d had more than enough of the City That Never Sleeps. But I was really sick in Radio City Music Hall and all its finery was lost on me. My eyes wouldn’t focus properly and my ears were buzzing. All I could see … Continue reading
What’s Coming up in February 2024
Brigidfest 24 in Melbourne Please don’t delay booking for Brigidfest, the hottest ticket in the Irish-Australian calendar (seats have sold out for some years). The good news is that we’re back at Batman’s Hill on Collins, our generous hosts at the western end of Collins, right opposite Southern Cross (and very handy for our regional … Continue reading
Professor J C Beckett
Irish History Professors in Irish Universities: Brief Lives Series I’m hoping this short series on Irish History Professors will make their achievement more widely known among Australian readers. I’m often disconcerted by how few of my friends and colleagues realize just how talented, professional, diverse and inclusive, Irish historians are. Lately I’ve taken delight in … Continue reading
Tá an Nollaig Buailte Linn: Christmas is upon us
Tinteán wishes all our readers Nollaig agus Athbhliain faoi mhaise Happy Christmas and New Year. A big thank you to all of our contributors this year and to our retiring editor Trevor McClaughlin. Beimid ar ais! We will be back in February 2024. And we wish to thank retiring editor, Trevor McClaughlin, historian and genealogist … Continue reading
Eamonn Wall: transatlantic poet part two
Much commemorated in literature and music, the 1798 legend lives on in the town because the geography and townscape have changed little. Wall walks the same trails meandering alongside the Slaney. That is his Enniscorthy, a place of enduring pain, and ancient prayer represented here by his poem, ‘Night Heron’ Continue reading
‘Fairytale of New York’ Shane McGowan
rish poetry is known for its lyricism and romanticism, and it might be seem strange to find beauty in the controversial ‘Fairy Tale of New York’, but comparisons can indeed be made between this popular song and traditional love poetry. Continue reading