A PDF of Terence MacSwineys Principles of Irish Freedom is now available on Cartlann.
MacSwiney; Sinn Féin Lord Mayor of Cork died while on hunger strike during the War of Independence. This edition of the text was published after his death.
https://cartlann.org/authors/terence-macswiney/
MacSwiney; Sinn Féin Lord Mayor of Cork died while on hunger strike during the War of Independence. This edition of the text was published after his death.
https://cartlann.org/authors/terence-macswiney/
Cartlann
Terence MacSwiney
Terence MacSwiney (1879-1920) was a Sinn Féin politician who served as the Lord Mayor of Cork during the War of Independence. During the war, he was [...]
We just launched 8 new additions to our James Connolly collection. A personal thanks to @MacGhW for his help in transcribing them. Go take a peak!
https://cartlann.org/authors/james-connolly/
https://cartlann.org/authors/james-connolly/
Cartlann
James Connolly
James Connolly (1868-1916) was the foremost Irish socialist republican of his time. He was the leader of the Irish Citizen Army (ICA), founder and leader [...]
Our January update for where we are at with Cartlann.org. The new major texts we have added, and what's next. Give it a look!
https://cartlann.org/2021/01/31/january-2021-update/
https://cartlann.org/2021/01/31/january-2021-update/
Cartlann
January 2021 Update
Firstly, we would like to quickly wish you all a happy St. Brigid's Day tomorrow! Throughout January, Cartlann has made some very exciting additions [...]
Irelands legendary mythological tale; Táin Bó Cuailgne or The Cattle Raid of Cooley in English is now available on Cartlann.org.
The oldest epic in Western Europe, An Táin captures the ethos of Ancient Ireland and it's people, translated into English by folklorist Lucy Winfred Faraday in 1904 but available today for your reading pleasure.
https://cartlann.org/authors/lucy-winifred-faraday/an-tain-bo-cuailgne/
The oldest epic in Western Europe, An Táin captures the ethos of Ancient Ireland and it's people, translated into English by folklorist Lucy Winfred Faraday in 1904 but available today for your reading pleasure.
https://cartlann.org/authors/lucy-winifred-faraday/an-tain-bo-cuailgne/
Good thread on one of our new authors William Rooney and his lecture 'The Development of the National Idea'.
https://twitter.com/AnChartlann/status/1360301259664752640?s=19
https://twitter.com/AnChartlann/status/1360301259664752640?s=19
Twitter
An Chartlann
Featuring a brand new addition to the archive, the first of many works by William Rooney, described as the "Thomas Davis of the new movement" by Arthur Griffith, a lecture published in 1900 titled "The Development of the National Idea." https://t.co/M5Xloj5Muh
Now available: Irish Nationality by historian Stophord Green. An account of Irish history all the way from the arrival of Gaels to Ireland under the Act of Union.
https://cartlann.org/authors/alice-stopford-green/irish-nationality/
https://cartlann.org/authors/alice-stopford-green/irish-nationality/
Getting a new release in before the weeks end: History of the Irish Boy Scouts by Liam Mellows
https://twitter.com/AnChartlann/status/1363595864711835648?s=19
https://twitter.com/AnChartlann/status/1363595864711835648?s=19
Twitter
An Chartlann
Featuring our newest release, "The History Of The Irish Boy Scouts" by Liam Mellows published under the pseudonym "An Irish Volunteer Officer" in the Gaelic American in several editions from between April to August 1917. https://t.co/zZQomChOes
Our biggest release yet, 'The Last Conquest Of Ireland (Perhaps)' by John Mitchel, available now in PDF format (will be be available in on page text format soon)
"It is the story of an ancient Nation stricken down by a war more ruthless and sanguinary than any seven years' war, or thirty years' war, that Europe ever saw. No sack of Magdeburg, or rave of the Palatinate, ever approached in horror and desolation to the slaughters done in Ireland by mere official red tape and stationery, and the principles of Political Economy."
https://cartlann.org/authors/john-mitchel/the-last-conquest-of-ireland-perhaps/
"It is the story of an ancient Nation stricken down by a war more ruthless and sanguinary than any seven years' war, or thirty years' war, that Europe ever saw. No sack of Magdeburg, or rave of the Palatinate, ever approached in horror and desolation to the slaughters done in Ireland by mere official red tape and stationery, and the principles of Political Economy."
https://cartlann.org/authors/john-mitchel/the-last-conquest-of-ireland-perhaps/
What is a National Language? - Padraig Pearse
"Thus, to get at the real Ireland, we must go to the Irish language. The language sums up what the Gaelic race has been thinking ever since there was a Gaelic race. It contains Ireland’s message to her children and to the world."
https://cartlann.org/authors/padraig-pearse/what-is-a-national-language/
"Thus, to get at the real Ireland, we must go to the Irish language. The language sums up what the Gaelic race has been thinking ever since there was a Gaelic race. It contains Ireland’s message to her children and to the world."
https://cartlann.org/authors/padraig-pearse/what-is-a-national-language/
Cartlann
What Is A National Language?
From An Claidheamh Soluis, 28 January 1905. A language is evolved by a nation for the purpose of expressing its thought. Thus a nation’s speech is in a [...]
Featuring a new PDF of the Collected Writings of James Fintan Lalor, the radical Young Irelander, starring a preface by none other than James Connolly.
https://cartlann.org/authors/james-fintan-lalor/
https://cartlann.org/authors/james-fintan-lalor/
Forwarded from Heroes of Ireland
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It is very powerful if you are looking for a keyword or a quotation from a specific author. Simply type in the keyword and it will up a list of pages where said keyword is mentioned. From there you can CTRL + F to search on page for where it is located.
James Connolly's popular work "The Reconquest of Ireland' now has a brand new custom made PDF courtesy of yours truly.
https://cartlann.org/authors/james-connolly/the-re-conquest-of-ireland/
https://cartlann.org/authors/james-connolly/the-re-conquest-of-ireland/
"Aoibhinn bheith i mBinn Éadair", an Irish-language poem written about Howth and its Fianna past.
https://cartlann.org/authors/file-anaithnid/aoibhinn-bheith-i-mbinn-eadair/
https://cartlann.org/authors/file-anaithnid/aoibhinn-bheith-i-mbinn-eadair/
Cartlann
Aoibhinn bheith i mBinn Éadair
Aoibhinn bheith i mBinn Éadair,fírbhinn bheith ós a bánmhuir,cnoc lánmhar longmhar líonmhar,beann fhíonmhar fhonnmhar ághmhar. Beann i mbíodh Fionn is [...]
Featuring a brand new release, The Brehon Laws: A Legal Handbook by the Irish Parliamentary Party and Sinn Féin politician Laurence Ginnell, providing a basic outline of the Brehon law system of Gaelic Ireland.
Ginnell, one of the few people to have served as both a British Member of Parliament and as a Teachta Dála in Dáil Éireann, wrote The Brehon Laws: A Legal Handbook with readability in mind, describing Brehon Law in layman's terms rather than in difficult to parse legalese.
https://cartlann.org/authors/laurence-ginnell/the-brehon-laws-a-legal-handbook/
Ginnell, one of the few people to have served as both a British Member of Parliament and as a Teachta Dála in Dáil Éireann, wrote The Brehon Laws: A Legal Handbook with readability in mind, describing Brehon Law in layman's terms rather than in difficult to parse legalese.
https://cartlann.org/authors/laurence-ginnell/the-brehon-laws-a-legal-handbook/
https://cartlann.org/authors/thomas-davis/udalism-and-feudalism/
"Udalism and Feudalism", a two-part essay by the Young Irelander Thomas Davis, in which Davis coins an interesting social and economic philosophy known as "udalism" in rejection of landlordism and feudalism, the text available now on Cartlann.
Davis's conception of "Udalism" seems to be based upon the Brehon Law system of Gaelic Ireland and more particularly the old Irish land inheritance system of gavelkind, but it also draws upon more contemporary analyses of nations such as Norway.
"Udalism and Feudalism", a two-part essay by the Young Irelander Thomas Davis, in which Davis coins an interesting social and economic philosophy known as "udalism" in rejection of landlordism and feudalism, the text available now on Cartlann.
Davis's conception of "Udalism" seems to be based upon the Brehon Law system of Gaelic Ireland and more particularly the old Irish land inheritance system of gavelkind, but it also draws upon more contemporary analyses of nations such as Norway.