Three Castles Burning

Donal Fallon

  • 31 minutes 46 seconds
    The Isle of Wight on Emmet Road

    In 1970, the outdoor rock festival was a totally new idea in Ireland. Amidst press coverage of Woodstock and the Isle of Wight, focused on LSD and exagerated crowd trouble, the booking of Mungo Jerry, Thin Lizzy and others for Richmond Park would be the first Dublin experience of such a festival here. Why did this festival fail? And how, just a few short years later, had the festival become such an integral part of Irish youth culture?

     

    26 April 2024, 9:04 am
  • 40 minutes 9 seconds
    The Battle of Tallaght: 'Yankee Fenians' and 1867

    To the Dublin press, the American Civil War veterans in Dublin cut an unusual shape. These ‘Yankee’ characters looked different, but they also behaved differently. Under the direction of Captain Thomas J. Kelly, these men would be centrally important to the Fenian uprising of 1867. While history remembers this as a skirmish on a hill in Tallaght, much more happened in March 1867 than that.

    12 April 2024, 4:26 pm
  • 45 minutes 11 seconds
    'Then Mount Jerome for the Protestants.'

    The story of Mount Jerome Cemetery is the story of Victorian Dublin. There, many of the great innovaters of the city are at rest. If Glasnevin brings to mind the Irish revolution, Mount Jerome instead makes us think of the nineteenth century. Still, there is great diversity in who is (and isn't) buied there. This is a story that touches on everyone from Charles Stewart Parnell to the so-called 'General.'

    Thanks to Patrons of the podcast whose support made this research possible.

    30 March 2024, 2:13 pm
  • 45 minutes 35 seconds
    The Divine Mission of Discontent (Jim Larkin Part II)

    The labour leader Jim Larkin was international news when he departed Ireland in 1914. In America, Larkin would cross paths with the FBI founder J. Edgar Hoover, landing in prison for 'Criminal Anarchy'. What did all of this mean back in Dublin? My guest is Ronan Burtenshaw, author of a recent piece on Larkin for Jacobin magazine: https://jacobin.com/2024/01/jim-larkin-ireland-labor-150

    12 March 2024, 10:36 am
  • 34 minutes 51 seconds
    The Rising of the Moon (Jim Larkin Part I)

    This year marks the 150th anniversary of the birth of Jim Larkin. In this two-part special, Ronan Burtenshaw (author of a recent piece exploring Larkin for Jacobin magazine) joins me to discuss this important and divisive revolutionary figure. Larkin in Dublin means 1913, but where did he come from? This story brings us from Liverpool Cathedral to the streets of West Belfast.

    Ronan's piece: https://jacobin.com/2024/01/jim-larkin-ireland-labor-150) 

    23 February 2024, 11:59 am
  • 41 minutes 52 seconds
    Before Mosley: The British Fascisti in Dublin

    Pádraig Óg Ó Ruairc is no stranger to this podcast. While his latest book explores 'The Disappeared' (launching this month from Merrion Press), he has also been undertaking a study of the far-right in Ireland historically. Moving beyond the familiar, like the Army Comrades Association ('the Blueshirts'), Pádraig's study begins with some more overlooked groups. Even before Oswald Mosley, the British Fascisti were a force with surprising connections to Dublin, and an active branch in the city.

    2 February 2024, 4:53 pm
  • 24 minutes 8 seconds
    Flying Fists and Union Jacks

    SEASON 3!

    A recent television debate on the Irish language in schools reminded me of a curious story from history. The Language Freedom Movement touches on many widely known figures in 1960s Ireland, including John B. Keane and the broadcaster Gay Byrne. In the Mansion House, a meeting descended into chaos.

    14 January 2024, 10:20 pm
  • 34 minutes 36 seconds
    From Ten Till Dusk: 200 Years of the RHA (with Cristín Leach)

    2023 marks the 200th anniversary of the Royal Hibernian Academy, an institution which has moved across the Liffey owing to the flames of Easter Week, and which has championed the visual arts through an ever-changing Ireland.  Cristín Leach is the author of a new creative study of the body, which weaves history and art to tell the story.

    22 December 2023, 10:07 am
  • 28 minutes 25 seconds
    There Is a Light That Never Goes Out

    Over five generations, one family have played a unique role in the story of the Phoenix Park. More than that, the Flanagan family have a history that stretches back even earlier in the story of this beloved space. Joyce maintained that in the particular is contained the universal - can we tell the story of a place through this one unique tale?

    The Lamplighters of the Phoenix Park is available now from all good bookshops.

    19 December 2023, 1:35 pm
  • 28 minutes 53 seconds
    Asylum: Inside Grangegorman

    Brendan Kelly is the author of a new history of Grangegorman and the asylum located there for generations. This conversation was recorded within the grounds of the site. What was the life of a patient in an asylum really like? Through letters, medical records and doctors' notes, Brendan Kelly gives us a glimpse inside Grangegorman and the lives of those who lived and worked there.

    Not a particularly easy listen at times - and please note that some of the language, drawn from primary sources, reflects very different times.

    14 December 2023, 11:52 am
  • 19 minutes 28 seconds
    Napoleon's Toothbrush

    Ridley Scott doesn't seem to get on with historians, but here is a nice little story all about Napoleon and his surprising Dublin connections. One of the most revealing and personal insights into Napoleon came from a Dublin doctor who spent time with him on the island of St Helena.

    My Name Is Napoleon Bonaparte by Dónal Lunny and Frank Harte was released in 2001.

    11 December 2023, 8:54 pm
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