Afleveringen
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Liz Gillis on the new RTÉ TV series, which explores inherited memories and unheard testimony of the Civil War.
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Eoin Kinsella on his new book which covers a century of The Irish Defence Forces.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Mary Muldowney talks about the writer Robert Tressell, and the upcoming Tressell Festival on Saturday 6th of May at Liberty Hall.
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The new TV Series 'The Silent Civil War'; a new comprehensive history of The Irish Defence Forces; and the life of Irish writer Robert Tressell.
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Colm Flynn speaks to Katherine MacInnes, author of the book 'Snow Widows: Scott's Fatal Antarctic Expedition Through the Eyes of the Women They Left Behind'
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The life and work of Elizabeth and Susan Yeats is discussed by Dr Angela Griffith and Eunan McKinney.
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Myles talks to Isadore Ryan, author of 'Roman Imbroglio: Italy and the Irish During World War Two'
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The women left behind after Robert Falcon Scott's fatal expedition to the South Pole; The life and work of the Yeats sisters; and stories of the Irish in Italy during WW2.
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Mairéad Carew on the extraordinary story of the British-Israelites, their strange excavations, and the campaign to save the Hill of Tara.
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Sandra Scanlon of UCD on the United States Presidents who ran afoul of the law, from Ulysses S. Grant to Donald J. Trump.
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Ian Kenneally on the Westmeath woman who became a national hero in the USA for her brave response to a steamboat fire.
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Tara and the Ark of the Covenant; A short history of Presidential criminality; and Westmeath woman Mary McCann's heroic response to the tragic General Slocum disaster.
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Conor Sweetman reports on the tale of an important artefact from the Irish Civil War. He talks to Kenneth L.Smith-Christmas, Lar Joye and Brenda Malone from the National Museum of Ireland.
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Paul Huddie joins Myles to discuss two court battles in 1920s Ireland, which illustrate the legal and economic complexity of dissolving the union between Ireland and Great Britain.
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Mary McAuliffe on the challenges facing women applying for military service pensions in the 1920s and 1930s.
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Jonathan C. Creasy reports from the Woodbury Poetry Room at Harvard University, home of a rich collection of literary audio recordings - and the life of one of its most important curators, John “Jack” Lincoln Sweeney.
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The rediscovery of a field gun used to shell the Four Courts; Court battles over military charity assets in 1920s Ireland; women who applied for Military Service Pensions in the 1920s and '30s; and the 'Library of Voices' at Harvard University.
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Gerard Shannon joins Myles to talk about the life and death of the republican leader Liam Lynch.
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Cathy Scuffil joins Myles to talk about 800 years of industry in Harold's Cross in Dublin.
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The life and death of republican leader Liam Lynch; and 800 years of industry in Harold's Cross.
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