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
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
We've ran the the numbers and it appears very few people who use the site are making use of the search function.
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.
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.
Some of the poetry of the 1916 martyr Roger Casement, featuring poems titled “Parnell”, “Benburb” and “The Triumph of Hugh O’Neill” as well as poems from his time spent in Africa, now available on Cartlann.
https://cartlann.org/authors/roger-casement/some-poems-of-roger-casement/
https://cartlann.org/authors/roger-casement/some-poems-of-roger-casement/
The Path To Freedom by Michael Collins is now finally available in a PDF format. The writings of one of Ireland’s most famous and revered men touch on the Treaty, on Collins’ economic and cultural policies for a new Ireland, his strategy for winning back the North and his reflections on the revolutionary movement. The PDF is now available to view in Cartlann:
https://cartlann.org/authors/michael-collins/the-path-to-freedom/
https://cartlann.org/authors/michael-collins/the-path-to-freedom/
"Irish Literature: Its Origins, Environment and Influence", a lecture from one of the leading men of the Irish Literary Revival, George Sigerson, available now on the site.
https://cartlann.org/authors/george-sigerson/irish-literature-its-origin-environment-and-influence/
https://cartlann.org/authors/george-sigerson/irish-literature-its-origin-environment-and-influence/
The Proclamation of Dungannon, issued on 1st October 1641, by Phelim O'Neill, commencing the 1641 rebellion, now available on the site:
https://cartlann.org/authors/phelim-oneill/proclamation-of-dungannon/
https://cartlann.org/authors/phelim-oneill/proclamation-of-dungannon/
The Hedge Schools of Ireland", a 1935 article by Aodh de Blácam on the old Penal Law-era Catholic and Presbyterian hedge schools of Ireland, available on the site.
https://cartlann.org/authors/aodh-de-blacam/the-hedge-schools-of-ireland/
https://cartlann.org/authors/aodh-de-blacam/the-hedge-schools-of-ireland/
Our latest PDF release, "The Old Irish World", by the historian Alice Stopford Green:
https://cartlann.org/authors/alice-stopford-green/the-old-irish-world/
https://cartlann.org/authors/alice-stopford-green/the-old-irish-world/
Three poems attributed to Saint Colmcille, one of Ireland's Twelve Apostles and three patron saints, have been added to the site:
https://cartlann.org/authors/colmcille/
https://cartlann.org/authors/colmcille/
The "Account of the Late Plan of Insurrection in Dublin, And Cause of Its Failure", an excellent and highly valuable first-hand account of the 1803 rebellion by Robert Emmet hastily written as he awaited his fate.
https://cartlann.org/authors/robert-emmet/account-of-the-late-plan-of-insurrection-in-dublin-and-cause-of-its-failure/
https://cartlann.org/authors/robert-emmet/account-of-the-late-plan-of-insurrection-in-dublin-and-cause-of-its-failure/
"Remember against whom you fight, your oppressors for six hundred years, remember their massacres, their tortures, remember your murdered friends, your burned houses, your violated females, keep in mind your country, to whom you are now giving her high rank among nations."
A proclamation from the United Irishmen addressed to the citizens of Dublin from the 1803 rebellion, believed to have been authored by Phillip Long, now available on the site:
https://cartlann.org/categories/united-irishmen/proclamation-to-citizens-of-dublin/
A proclamation from the United Irishmen addressed to the citizens of Dublin from the 1803 rebellion, believed to have been authored by Phillip Long, now available on the site:
https://cartlann.org/categories/united-irishmen/proclamation-to-citizens-of-dublin/