Ireland’s Four Ancient Provinces
Ireland is divided into four ancient provinces. On this map: 1) Ulster is light brown and dark brown, 2) Leinster is gray, 3) Munster is blue, and 4) Connacht (Connaught) is purple.
Ireland and the United Kingdom: A Few Population Statistics
Looking at a map, it’s easy to see that Ireland is smaller than Great Britain. Comparing populations, though, takes a little more work. Below are some statistics I recently pulled together to make a comparison.
What Happened to the 19th-Century Irish Census Returns?
The first island-wide census of Ireland was conducted in 1821. Every ten years thereafter a census was conducted up through 1911, but only the 1901 and 1911 census records survive in their entirety.
Checking the Facts on an Old Family Story about Irish President Eamon de Valera
Eamon de Valera was the only commandant from the failed 1916 Easter Rising who wasn’t executed by the British.
Kilcummin Cemetery, County Sligo, Ireland
Kilcummin Cemetery is located near the village of Cloonacool at the foot of the Ox Mountains in County Sligo, Ireland.
Emerald Isle: A Satellite View of Ireland from NASA Earth Observatory
This satellite view of Ireland was taken from NASA’s Aqua satellite on October 11th, 2010, an unusually cloud-free day for that time of year.
Dublin’s Great Irish Famine Memorial at Custom House Quay
During the Great Irish Famine of 1845 to 1851 a blight destroyed Ireland’s potato crop, the main staple food for the country’s impoverished agricultural laborers and tenant farmers.
In Pursuit of Liberty: The United Irishmen and the Rebellion of 1798
Inspired by the revolutions in America and France, a group of reformers in Belfast, Ireland organized the Society of United Irishmen in 1791.