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The Royal Irish Academy

The Royal Irish Academywww.ria.ie
The Royal Irish Academy/Acadamh Ríoga na hEireann is an all-Ireland, independent, academic body that promotes study and excellence in the sciences, humanities and social sciences. It is the principal learned society in Ireland and has over 420 members who are elected in recognition of their academic achievements. The Royal Irish Academy, the academy for the sciences and humanities for the whole of Ireland will vigorously promote excellence in scholarship, recognise achievements in learning, direct research programmes and undertake its own research projects, particularly in areas relating to Ireland and its heritage.
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Episodes

How do we study bats and rats to find the secret of everlasting youth?

Professor Emma Teeling MRIA talks about her research into what bat genetics can teach us about human disease and aging. Living mammals (~5,400 species) originated approximately 217-238 Million Years Ago, inhabit every biome on Earth, and are arguably one of the most phenotypically diverse group of vertebrates. This Academy Discourse will showcase how studying our most unique mammals, using state-of-the-art genomic technologies coupled with traditional field studies, can uncover how to live healt...

Oct 30, 201957 min

Personal Digital Archiving: Storing, Organising and Protecting Your Digital Content for the Future

Public lecture by Sara Day Thomson of the Digital Preservation Coalition. This talk, co-organised by the Digital Repository of Ireland and the National Archives, Ireland, focuses on the power of a personal digital archive and the importance of determining a course of action for safeguarding that archive. It prompts us to start thinking about how we manage our digital files and how we may access or share them in the future. Sara Day Thomson discusses the question ‘what is digital archiving?’ befo...

Sep 26, 201953 min

Rural Conversations Report Launch

Mr Michael Ring T.D., Minister for Rural and Community Development, launched the Rural Conversations report on Wednesday, 4 September 2019 at the Royal Irish Academy. Rural Conversations was a series of three rural stakeholder consultative events produced by the RIA’s Social Sciences Committee in association with the Department of Rural and Community Development. Stakeholders’ feedback on economic development, social cohesion and sustainable communities in rural Ireland was recorded at each of t...

Sep 04, 201939 min

Count Paul Strzelecki and the Great Famine

Speaker: Professor Peter Gray, Queens University Belfast, and Assoc. Professor Emily Mark-FitzGerald, University College Dublin, A Library Lunchtime Lecture exploring the life of Count Strzelecki, a Polish humanitarian who saved over 200,000 children during the Great Irish Famine. This lecture accompanied the exhibition 'A Forgotten Polish Hero of the Great Irish Famine: Paul Strzelecki’s Struggle to Save Thousands'. Location: Academy House Date: Wednesday 12 June 2019 Disclaimer: The Royal Iris...

Jun 18, 201947 min

Nicola Sturgeon in Conversation with Dearbhail McDonald

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon participated in a wide-ranging discussion with journalist Dearbhail McDonald including a short Q&A session to close in the Royal Irish Academy on 27 May 2019. Nicola Sturgeon Biography Born in Irvine in 1970 and educated at Greenwood Academy, she studied law at the University of Glasgow where she graduated with LLB (Hons) and Diploma in legal practice. Before entering the Scottish Parliament as a regional MSP for Glasgow in 1999 she worked as a solic...

May 27, 201937 min

Social Media And Democracy How Do We Balance Rights And Responsibilities

This panel discussion took place on 1 May 2019 at the Royal Irish Academy. Panellists explored the challenges and opportunities that digital and social media opens in our society and the growing case, across Europe, for online content regulation and controls. Panelists discussed questions such as; How do we balance the civil freedom of expression that online provides while protecting the common good? What is the balance of responsibilities of the Internet global companies behind social media pla...

May 08, 20191 hr 16 min

Ties that endure - the lives and correspondence of three C18th sisters

Library Lunchtime Lecture by Dr Gaye Ashford on three C18th sisters - Katherine Conolly, Jane Bonnell and Mary Jones. The fourth lecture in our series 'Sisters' celebrating the lives and achievements of five families of sisters who have made their mark on Irish life. Location: Academy House Date: Wednesday 10 April, 2019 Speaker: Dr Gaye Ashford, a graduate of Dublin City University (DCU), is a historian of the eighteenth century with a particular interest in the history of childhood. She has pu...

Apr 24, 201944 min

‘Who will ever say again that poetry does not pay?': the Yeats sisters and the Cuala Press

Library Lunchtime Lecture by Dr Lucy Collins, School of English, Drama & Film, UCD. The third lecture in our series 'Sisters', celebrating sisterhood and specifically the lives and achievements of five families of sisters who made their mark on Irish life. Location: Academy House Date: Wednesday 3 April, 2019 Disclaimer: The Royal Irish Academy has prepared this content responsibly and carefully, but disclaims all warranties, express or implied, as to the accuracy of the information containe...

Apr 24, 201956 min

‘A precious boon' in difficult times - Hanna Sheehy Skeffington and her sisters

Library Lunchtime Lecture by Dr Margaret Ward, Honorary Senior Lecturer in History at Queen’s University, Belfast. The Second lecture in our series 'Sisters', celebrating sisterhood and specifically the lives and achievements of five families of sisters who made their mark on Irish life. Location: Academy House Date: Wednesday 27 March, 2019 Speaker: Dr Margaret Ward is Honorary Senior Lecturer in History at Queen’s University, Belfast. Amongst her many publications are Unmanageable Revolutionar...

Apr 24, 201941 min

The Shackleton sisters: Irish Quaker women c. 1750-1850

Library Lunchtime Lecture by Dr Mary O'Dowd, MRIA, Queen's University of Belfast. The fifth lecture in our series 'Sisters' celebrating the lives and achievements of five families of sisters who have made their mark on Irish life. Location: Academy House Date: Wednesday 10 April, 2019 Disclaimer: The Royal Irish Academy has prepared this content responsibly and carefully, but disclaims all warranties, express or implied, as to the accuracy of the information contained in any of the materials. Th...

Apr 24, 201947 min

'Two girls in silk kimonos': the Gore-Booth sisters, childhood and political development’

Library Lunchtime Lecture by Dr Sonja Tiernan, Associate Professor of Modern History and Head of Department of History and Politics at Liverpool Hope University. The first lecture in our series 'Sisters' celebrating the lives and achievements of five families of sisters who have made their mark on Irish life. series celebrating sisterhood and specifically the lives and achievements of five families of sisters who made their mark on Irish life. Location: Academy House. Date: Wednesday 13 March, 2...

Apr 24, 201934 min

'Democracy, Truth and Trust in Europe'

This Academy Discourse by Professor Michele Nicoletti, Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Trento, Italy and Former President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.is part of a discourse series sponsored by Mason Hayes & Curran. Friday, March 29, 2019 - 18:00, Academy House. About the speaker Michele Nicoletti is Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Trento. He has authored books on Kierkegaard’s philosophy of subjectivity (1983), Carl Sch...

Apr 11, 201952 min

Rural Conversation Podcast No. 3: 'Building vibrant and sustainable communities in rural Ireland'

Rural Conversation No. 3: 'Building vibrant and sustainable communities in rural Ireland’, the nal intheseriesofthreeRuralConversationswasheld on Thursday, 4 April 2019 and hosted in Waterford Institute of Technology (WIT). Dr Willie Donnelly, President, WIT (timecode—1:18) welcomed the delegates and opened the event. Professor Áine Hyland, MRIA spoke on behalf of the Royal Irish Academy's Social Sciences Committee, outlining the background to the series and making some observations on the them...

Apr 04, 20191 hr 27 min

“A few trifling exceptions”: ignored texts in RIA MS 23 N 10

Dr Chantal Kobel is a postdoctoral researcher in the School of Celtic Studies, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil Mhá Nuad. The Royal Irish Academy manuscript known by its shelfmark ‘23 N 10’ was produced in Ballycummin, Co. Roscommon, in the sixteenth century. It is an extraordinarily important manuscript for many reasons, but it is particularly significant because it contains tales which are ...

Mar 28, 201940 min

The language of the Cín Dromma Snechtai texts

Dr David Stifter is Professor of Old and Middle Irish at Maynooth University. He is founder and editor of the interdisciplinary Celtic-studies journal Keltische Forschungen (Vienna 2006–), and founding member of the Societas Celtologica Europaea (European Association of Celtic Studies scholars). His research interests are language variation and change in Old Irish and comparative Celtic linguistics (esp. Old Irish and Continental Celtic). His research projects include a dictionary of the Old Iri...

Mar 28, 201935 min

Wisdom literature in RIA MS 23 N 10

Dr Deborah Hayden is a Lecturer in the Department of Early Irish at Maynooth University, where she is currently also working as Principal Investigator for the project Medieval Irish Medicine in its North-western European Context: A Case Study of Two Unpublished Texts, funded by a Laureate Award from the Irish Research Council. Her research interests and publications centre on medieval Irish, Latin and Welsh language, literature and textual culture, in particular the history of linguistic thought...

Mar 28, 201938 min

“Though the hero was bloodied, he was not weak”: religious poetry and manuscript context

Dr Elizabeth Boyle is Head of the Department of Early Irish at Maynooth University. Her research centres on the religious, cultural and intellectual history of medieval Ireland. She is currently writing a book, entitled History and Salvation in Medieval Ireland, to be published by Routledge. Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil Mhá Nuad. The Royal Irish Academy manuscript known by its shelfmark ‘23 N 10’ was produced in Ballycummin, C...

Mar 28, 201937 min

“Feen- und Elfengeschichten” in Cín Dromma Snechtai

John Carey is Professor of Early and Medieval Irish at University College Cork. His most recent books, both published in 2018, are The Ever-New Tongue: The Text in the Book of Lismore (Brepols) and The Mythological Cycle of Medieval Irish Literature (Cork Studies in Celtic Literatures). Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil Mhá Nuad. The Royal Irish Academy manuscript known by its shelfmark ‘23 N 10’ was produced in Ballycummin, Co. Ro...

Mar 28, 201937 min

The Book of Ballycummin: books as objects in the sixteenth century

Karen Ralph lectures in medieval art in NYU Paris. Her research interests focus primarily on the patronage of art and architecture in medieval Ireland. Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil Mhá Nuad. The Royal Irish Academy manuscript known by its shelfmark ‘23 N 10’ was produced in Ballycummin, Co. Roscommon, in the sixteenth century. It is an extraordinarily important manuscript for many reasons, but it is particularly significant be...

Mar 28, 201940 min

RIA MS 23 N 10 as a manuscript miscellany

Kevin Murray is a Senior Lecturer in The Department of Early and Medieval Irish in University College Cork. His research interests include medieval Irish language and literature (particularly the Finn Cycle), and textual editing. He is also one of the editors of the Locus project which is creating a new Historical Dictionary of Gaelic Placenames to replace Fr Edmund Hogan’s Onomasticon Goedelicum. Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil ...

Mar 28, 201935 min

Legal texts in RIA MS 23 N 10

Professor Liam Breatnach, MRIA is a Senior Professor in the School of Celtic Studies and co-editor of the journal Ériu, published by the Royal Irish Academy. His main research interests are in Old Irish language, Middle Irish and the historical development of Irish, law texts, and poets, poetry and metrics. Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil Mhá Nuad. The Royal Irish Academy manuscript known by its shelfmark ‘23 N 10’ was produced i...

Mar 28, 201930 min

“Queer” and “Grotesque”: RIA MS 23 N 10 and Irish orthography

Dr Mícheál Hoyne is Bergin Fellow in the School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. He studied Modern Irish and History in Trinity College, where he also wrote his PhD, and before joining the School of Celtic Studies taught in the Philipps-Universitaet in Marburg. Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil Mhá Nuad. The Royal Irish Academy manuscript known by its shelfmark ‘23 N 10’ was produced in Ballycummin, C...

Mar 28, 201940 min

The learned family of Ó Maoil Chonaire – the Connacht branch

Nollaig Ó Muraíle, MRIA, is a former senior lecturer in Irish at NUI Galway, and, prior to that, reader in Irish and Celtic Studies at Queen's University Belfast. His numerous publications treat, inter alia, of the Gaelic manuscript tradition, learned families of Gaelic Ireland, Irish onomastics, and medieval Irish annals and genealogies. Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil Mhá Nuad. The Royal Irish Academy manuscript known by its sh...

Mar 28, 201936 min

The manuscript in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries

Prof. Richard Sharpe, Hon. MRIA Based at the University of Oxford, Richard Sharpe has published extensively on a range of medieval topics – lives of saints, studies of medieval libraries, individual manuscripts and collections. With Mícheál Hoyne, he has compiled Clóliosta, an online catalogue of books printed in Irish, 1571-1871 (publication autumn 2019). Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoil Mhá Nuad. The Royal Irish Academy manuscri...

Mar 28, 201928 min

RIA MS 23 N 10 and the transmission of the Ulster Cycle of Tales

Professor Ruairí Ó hUiginn MRIA is Director and Senior Professor in the School of Celtic Studies at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. He formerly was Professor of Modern Irish at Maynooth University and has held lecturing positions in the universities of Uppsala, Bonn, Galway and at Queen’s University Belfast. He has published widely on many aspects of the Irish language and its literature. Conference by the Royal Irish Academy Library in partnership with Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Ollscoi...

Mar 28, 201943 min

Rural Conversation No. 2: ‘Enhancing social cohesion among communities in rural Ireland’

Rural Conversation No. 2: ‘Enhancing social cohesion among communities in rural Ireland’ was held on 28 February 2019. It was the second in this series of consultative rural stakeholder events and was held in Dundalk Institute of Technology (DkIT) This consultative rural stakeholder event was opened by Dr Michael Mulvey, President, DkIT (timecode— 1:00) who hosted this event. Professor Áine Hyland, MRIA spoke on behalf of the Royal Irish Academy's Social Sciences Committee, outlining the backgro...

Mar 07, 20191 hr 14 min

Women In Goverment 4 Tanaisti In Converation

Wednesday 12 December 2018 Discourse marking the centenary of the 1918 parliamentary elections when women voted and stood for election to parliament for the first time, the Royal Irish Academy presented the four female former Tánaistí: Joan Burton, T.D., Mary Coughlan, Frances Fitzgerald, T.D. and Mary Harney in conversation with David McCullagh to share their experiences of governing and gender in Ireland, particularly their experiences of holding the second highest role in government: Tánaiste...

Feb 28, 20191 hr 7 min

Recent insights into how the Earth works: embracing uncertainty

Discourse with Professor Chris Bean in which he discusses predictability and uncertainty in forecasting volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, landslides. On 25 September 2018, Professor Chris Bean's discourse 'Recent insights into how the Earth works: embracing uncertainty' took place in Academy House. In the following interview, he outlines... • How the Earth interacts in its totality and how Earth’s components interact in the Earth’s system. • The difference between prediction and forecasting where...

Feb 28, 20191 hr 7 min

Securing Connected Devices: An Arms Race

Wednesday 7 November 2018 This Academy Discourse by Professor Máire O'Neill, Queen's University Belfast, is the eighth in the series sponsored by Mason Hayes & Curran. With the rapid proliferation of pervasive electronic devices in our lives, the internet of things (IoT) has become a reality and its influence on our day to day activities is set to further increase with a projected 125 Billion connected devices by 2030. However, this poses serious security and privacy issues as we will no lon...

Feb 28, 201930 min

'The Irish dimension to British history: from the Act of Union to Brexit'

Academy Discourse Series sponsored by Mason Hayes & Curran Tuesday 15 January 2019, Academy House Sir David Cannadine, President of the British Academy and Dodge Professor of History, Princeton University, addresses the key issues in Irish history within the context of British history from the early 1800s and the Act of Union, through to the current Brexit situation.

Feb 25, 201942 min
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