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National Monuments Service
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 27 พ.ค. 2020
Spanish Armada Wrecks,Streedagh,Co.Sligo:2015 Investigations and Recovery of Archaeological Material
‘Spanish Armada Wrecks, Streedagh, Co. Sligo: 2015 Investigations and Recovery of Archaeological Material by Ireland’s National Monuments Service
‘During winter storms in 1588, some 26 Spanish Armada vessels were lost off the coast of Ireland. Three were wrecked off Streedagh Strand, Co Sligo with over 1,000 lives lost. In 2015, extreme weather exposed the vulnerable remains of one of the ships, La Juliana. This video captures the investigation by the Underwater Archaeology Unit (UAU) of the National Monuments Service. The UAU identified sections of the hull, several anchors, carriage wheels and ornate bronze cannon. Nine guns were safely recovered along with other material, and brought to the surface after 430 years. They are currently undergoing conservation by the National Museum of Ireland.’
‘During winter storms in 1588, some 26 Spanish Armada vessels were lost off the coast of Ireland. Three were wrecked off Streedagh Strand, Co Sligo with over 1,000 lives lost. In 2015, extreme weather exposed the vulnerable remains of one of the ships, La Juliana. This video captures the investigation by the Underwater Archaeology Unit (UAU) of the National Monuments Service. The UAU identified sections of the hull, several anchors, carriage wheels and ornate bronze cannon. Nine guns were safely recovered along with other material, and brought to the surface after 430 years. They are currently undergoing conservation by the National Museum of Ireland.’
มุมมอง: 116
วีดีโอ
Tiny tell tale details on Insular metalwork - Dr Niamh Whitfield
มุมมอง 1412 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tiny tell-tale details on Insular metalwork Decoration on Insular metalwork dating from the late seventh to the ninth century AD is distinguished by mastery of complex ornament on such a minute scale that it is best examined under magnification-‘more like the work of fairies than of human beings’, according to one nineteenth-century commentator. In this talk attention will be drawn to three ver...
Spectroscopy and the Irish manuscript - Pádraig Ó Macháin
มุมมอง 1292 หลายเดือนก่อน
Spectroscopy and the Irish manuscript The UCC-based Inks & Skins project explores the materiality of the Irish vellum manuscript from the sixth century to the sixteenth. It targets inks, pigments and different aspects of the generation and preparation of calfskin as a writing support. This paper will give an overview of the work to date, describing the methodologies employed and looking forward...
A pinch of Tudor seasoning - Brigitte Webster
มุมมอง 532 หลายเดือนก่อน
A pinch of Tudor seasoning: restoring past repas T udor banquets and feasts have recently become all the rage, yet they are a far cry from the true Tudor culinary experience. Genuine Tudor food prepared to authentic period recipes is an unexpected revelation for the palette: surprisingly pleasant, full of historical aroma and the drama of traditional spice mixes which often astounds even the mo...
A snapshot of music archaeology of Southern Africa - Dr Joshua Kumbani
มุมมอง 472 หลายเดือนก่อน
A snapshot of the music archaeology of Southern Africa Music archaeology in Southern Africa has historically received limited attention. While earlier archaeological reports and publications occasionally mentioned potential musical instruments recovered during excavations or depicted in rock art, these finds were rarely the focus of detailed study. This presentation will focus on musical and so...
Contextualising the human past through pollen analysis - Gill Plunkett
มุมมอง 1502 หลายเดือนก่อน
Contextualising the human past through pollen analysis Pollen grains rank amongst the smallest traces of past human activity, with dimensions approximating the width of a human hair. Produced by all flowering plants and with a structure that is resistant to decay, pollen is preserved in a range of sediment types. Extracting and analysing pollen from sediments provides insights into plants that ...
Hidden traces: building the bigger picture from (below) the ground up - Dr Susan Curran
มุมมอง 1562 หลายเดือนก่อน
Hidden traces: building the bigger picture from (below) the ground up Ireland’s past has left an indelible imprint on its landscape, with archaeological remains such as castles, megaliths and ecclesiastical sites easily recognisable throughout the country. Not everything is visible to the naked eye, however, and such upstanding remains are often only part of the story. Many human activities lea...
Inhaling heritage? Dr Caro Verbeek
มุมมอง 1192 หลายเดือนก่อน
Inhaling heritage? On the (re)creation and effects of the smell of the Battle of Waterloo Although invisible and intangible, scents are an important part of our daily lives, materials, objects and traditions, and therefore of our heritage. In fact, it is hardly conceivable to imagine anything that is not accompanied by odour. Climate (change), energy transitions, cities, communities and our own...
Preserved moments of traumatic time - Dr Damian Sheils
มุมมอง 2332 หลายเดือนก่อน
Preserved moments of traumatic time: the archaeology of small finds on Irish conflict sites Dr Damian Sheils Preserved moments of traumatic time: the archaeology of small finds on Irish conflict sites Few objects in the archaeological record capture moments of traumatic time quite like those from sites of conflict. Taken in isolation, many of these small finds appear unremarkable: a lead bullet...
Traces: The Archaeology of Small Things Malcolm Noonan TDMinister's Opening Address
มุมมอง 752 หลายเดือนก่อน
Traces: the archaeology of small things Opening Address by Malcolm Noonan TD Minister of State for Nature, Heritage and Electoral Reform Archaeologists glean a lot from small things-minuscule pollen grains or small everyday artefacts tell stories of a peopled landscape; the finer details of medieval metalwork and manuscripts illuminate the work of skilled craftspeople and the senses of sound, t...
Knockroe Winter Solstice
มุมมอง 848ปีที่แล้ว
Knockroe passage tomb in the valley of the Lingaun River in south Kilkenny is unique in Ireland. Though smaller than the great tombs of the Boyne valley, it features #megalithicart similar to that found on its Meath cousins. However, what makes Knockroe stand out from all other Neolithic passage tombs in Ireland is its dual alignment on both the rising and setting sun of the #wintersolstice. Th...
Newgrange Winter Solstice
มุมมอง 27Kปีที่แล้ว
Newgrange is best known for the illumination of its passage and chamber by the rising sun at the Winter Solstice. Above the entrance to the passage of the mound there is an opening called a roof-box. On mornings around the winter solstice a beam of light penetrates the roof-box and travels up the 19 meter passage and into the chamber. As the sun rises higher, the beam widens so that the whole c...
2024 Community Monuments Fund
มุมมอง 170ปีที่แล้ว
The 2024 Community Monuments Fund is now open for applications. Next year’s fund will invest €7 million to help owners and custodians of archaeological monuments to safeguard them into the future. It is estimated that the funding for 2024 will support approximately 120 projects. The core aims of the Community Monuments Fund are to conserve, maintain, protect and promote local monuments and hist...
Imirce - Migration and Ireland through time - Minister Malcolm Noonan TD - Opening Speech
มุมมอง 371ปีที่แล้ว
Imirce - Migration and Ireland through time NATIONAL MONUMENTS SERVICE 6th ANNUAL ARCHAEOLOGY CONFERENCE Imirce-migration, the overall theme of this programme-looks at the evidence for arrival in Ireland, alongside examples of Irish arrivals elsewhere, as a means of exploring and revealing the multiplicity of identities that have contributed-and continue to contribute-to Irish society through t...
Raiders, traders and settlers in late Iron Age and early medieval - Jacqueline Cahill Wilson
มุมมอง 614ปีที่แล้ว
Imirce - Migration and Ireland through time NATIONAL MONUMENTS SERVICE 6th ANNUAL ARCHAEOLOGY CONFERENCE Raiders, traders and settlers in late Iron Age and early medieval Ireland and Britain Over the past 25 years dedicated and innovative research projects in Ireland, the UK and Europe have allowed us to shed new light on this dynamic period in Irish history. The application of increasingly ref...
The Irish DNA Atlas: providing a map of Irish genetics in and out of Ireland - Dr Edmund Gilbert
มุมมอง 76Kปีที่แล้ว
The Irish DNA Atlas: providing a map of Irish genetics in and out of Ireland - Dr Edmund Gilbert
Encounters, stories and connections: hunter-gatherer Ireland - Prof Graeme Warren
มุมมอง 679ปีที่แล้ว
Encounters, stories and connections: hunter-gatherer Ireland - Prof Graeme Warren
English peasant settlement in Anglo-Norman Ireland - Dr Kieran O'Conor
มุมมอง 761ปีที่แล้ว
English peasant settlement in Anglo-Norman Ireland - Dr Kieran O'Conor
Archaeological remains of coffee plantations Irish migration to Cuba - Giselle González García
มุมมอง 247ปีที่แล้ว
Archaeological remains of coffee plantations Irish migration to Cuba - Giselle González García
Under a southern sky: Irish settlement of Baker’s Flat in colonial South Australia-Dr Susan Arthure
มุมมอง 324ปีที่แล้ว
Under a southern sky: Irish settlement of Baker’s Flat in colonial South Australia-Dr Susan Arthure
Beaubec: an alien cell in the Boyne Valley - Dr Geraldine Stout
มุมมอง 500ปีที่แล้ว
Beaubec: an alien cell in the Boyne Valley - Dr Geraldine Stout
Structures of import - the buildings of Dublin’s historic immigrant communities - Paul Duffy
มุมมอง 263ปีที่แล้ว
Structures of import - the buildings of Dublin’s historic immigrant communities - Paul Duffy
Heritage and Climate Action Webinar 26th June 2023
มุมมอง 80ปีที่แล้ว
Heritage and Climate Action Webinar 26th June 2023
Knockavrogeen West, Dingle Peninsula, Co Kerry : Investigation of unclassified megalithic tomb
มุมมอง 37Kปีที่แล้ว
Knockavrogeen West, Dingle Peninsula, Co Kerry : Investigation of unclassified megalithic tomb
Dr Neil Wilkin - NMS 2022 Archaeology Conference
มุมมอง 5892 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Neil Wilkin - NMS 2022 Archaeology Conference
Dr Alison Sheridan - NMS 2022 Archaeology Conference
มุมมอง 2K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Alison Sheridan - NMS 2022 Archaeology Conference
Dr Elizabeth Shee Twohig - NMS 2022 Archaeology Conference
มุมมอง 1.3K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Elizabeth Shee Twohig - NMS 2022 Archaeology Conference
Dr. Mary Cahill - NMS Archaeology Conference 2022
มุมมอง 1.5K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr. Mary Cahill - NMS Archaeology Conference 2022
and we cant build a children's hospital!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It's that time again when Finn and his companions must venture to the stronghold of Morrigan to retrieve Dagda's cauldron since she made off with it at Halloween and the earth has been baron and people have been living on the stores. But Finn will save us and in a matter of a couple of days will be back with the Dagdas Cauldron. This will greatly please Dagda and right away he will make his favorite porage recipe and all who are served it will go away satisfied. As Dagda plays his harp the sun resumes its dance across the sky Morrigan's greed and envy have been defeated one more time. Let's give 3 cheers to Finn and his companions. In the 4 cornered castle on the island of the strong doors where shadows and darkness meet together and bright wine brims over every beaker. Who will tell me what primal words were spoken by the Cauldron warmed by the breaths of 9 vegans the Perl-rimed Cauldron of Lord Dagda that will boil no coward repast or one forsworn and there will be brought to these Morrigan’s bright sword of doom. The Silver Branch.
Wow...that mountain is safekeeping alot of valuable history...❤
Is it *_ever_* open to the public?
From an American who will never get a chance to win the lottery to be able to see this is breathtaking.
At 4:01 to 4:08, that is the position you need to get into to charge up crystal particle in your brain (pineal gland). At dawn and dusk.
❤❤❤
Where did my 1% Basque come from in my formerly 100% Irish mother? 😂
Newgrange is a finished Stonehenge. It's original design wasn't for burying people, it was designed & built as a very robust shelter (Bunker) for people to go into to survive catastrophic conditions following devastating meteor impact/s. Radiation, winds, debris, shock blasts etc. Stonehenge was designed for exactly the same purpose & would have had a large roof/mound built over it however it was never finished. The two structures have astronomical alignments built into their design as a survival tool. These large structures were presumably built for the Druid elite, the telepaths, The Tuatha Dé Danann, the ancestors of the god An. Ancestors from the far east, Türkiye.
why not compare to finland
seeing somewhere you know your ancestors would have stood. powerful
An extremely well presented study! Thank you.
Irish from Wexford-emigrated to Canada, some during war of -1812, some during famine. Scottish gram came to Canada during ww1.
Where does North African people influence , was there any connection with Egypt 🇪🇬
Africans will never be Irish
My DNA test showed I am 60% Munster Irish from the South West of the country. I found it fascinating that you can trace your ancestry back to specific counties.
My Pa's DNA established he was Barra Norse. Genes are fascinating !
Please learn how to pronounce Newfoundland. Understand=Newfoundland.
Also, literally nobody needs the introduction "what is smell?" This isn't a childs book report
This reminded me to watch the newest _frankie and the goth_
That map has changed a lot in the last 12 months 😂😂😂😂
Oh thank you for these colorful drawings. Thank you for explaining to us what we cannot understand ourselves. Thank you for drawing those children's tables for us stupid people. Thank you for making sure we don't get lost in the sea of haplogroup information. Are we today's Internet users so stupid that we have to be told in color who came and went from where? I notice more and more videos like this on the internet that talk about some exact facts without giving us the opportunity to check them. Unfortunately, simple things are complicated. Why? Give us data for the male population today. Y chromosome. Give us data 500 years ago for the male population. Give us the data for 1000 years ago. And so continue 4000 to 5000 years back for Europe and Asia. Allow us to get "lost" in the haplogroups. Let the "experts" give their explanations, but allow us to create our own "stupid" explanations. Thank you in advance.
Get help! You will need it to shift that chip.
A very poor performanceby the lady presenter
That is a wonderful talk thank you.
I’m glad you put it back and covered it. Thank you. By the way, it’s spelled cairn.
cool as flip!
Autosomal DNA is only useful to understand the recent migration. Y DNA is far more useful to understand the migration however if you think this is representative of migration you must understand that hunter gathers tended to live in different areas with each generation while farmers did stay in the same area for multiple generations.
There is a lot of effort being put into making Irish people believe they were migrants. Funny that……
@jonahwhale9047 You’re way too deep and edgy to converse with a mere mortal like me. Yeah….you sure showed me didn’t you……
@jonahwhale9047 Clearly…….you are the deepest of “edge lords”. I tip my hat to you sir. I know when I’m bested.
What??? Do you think we rose out of the Irish siol after the ice retreated? LOL!
My hole family was banned and sold as idetured slaves then I have to listen to this propaganda sick pure propaganda who the f##k is she , eire, Aryan this is propaganda to take our country sick
There is SO much push on this of late... "we've ALWAYS had migration What saddens me so muchis it's not being misused to justify why by 2050 (ie in a 50 year period... just a 50 YEAR period. about 50% of the population will be "new" Irish IE: Either new to Ireland since 2000 ... or born to the new to Ireland And we're being told to shut up and take it I know no one who has a problem with immigrants coming with skills to Ireland to work. But this is not why small communities around Ireland are so distressed 😢
Remote criminal operatives have the capacity to take readings from the injectable bio-sensors which are inside most human bodies remotely while the victims are using their computer screen or a television screen. I don't simply mean that they can use the little camera at the top of the screen to remotely study you. I mean that they can remotely study you by means of remotely studying your biosensors while you are using your computer screen. I don't have the scientific patent number to prove this. However, I believe that there is an easy way to hinder remote criminal operatives from being able to study you by means of studying your internal bio-sensors through your computer screen. Simply turn the background colour of your screen to black so that the font is then white. I believe but can not prove that that this will severely hinder their remote capabilities which they are using against you. Some of the voice to skull remote operatives who communicate with me directly without my consent have expressed annoyance that I have turned my computer screen colour to a black background with while writing and they have told me by means of voice to skull direct communication that they can no longer read my biosensors remotely through my computer screen. I imagine that remote criminal operatives can also read a persons embedded biosensors through their smart phones in order to access private information about their physical health and their emotional wellbeing. The more that criminal networks understand about the workings of the human brain and body the more they can easily manipulate us in many and varied ways.
We keep from Iran 😊
❤️✨... Incroyable endroit .. magnifique travail de préservation ....
The O'Partholan Lineage ended up being MacFarlane in Scotland, said to have come from a Honor Escort for an Irish Princess going to Scotland (Dal Riata) for Marriage. Then the Presbyterian MacFarlanes went to Ulster (Northern Ireland) and became McFarlands, and then migrated as Scots-Irish, or Ulster Scots to the Americas. I wonder how true that old story is?
Very interesting and nice presentation 🙂🙂🙂
Don't Forget DOGGERLAND 😉
My father's Rest His Soul Mexican Crip code is ALTA in ALTA California ❤️🔥🪽 Tuatha De Acacia Tepehuan Tribe
How do you explain all the red hair in Ireland? Would it be from Norse Vikings?
No. Data reports Viking DNA in about 5-6% of Irish population. Their presence of Viking DNA in Ireland is ridiculously over-exaggerated. Their were effectively kicked out 1000 years ago.
Rocket science 🙄
As the audience, I am waiting to hear words, uhm, uhm, uhm, ruins the presentation. Uhm is NOT a word.
What about Egypt? The history of Ireland and Scotland, says that they came from Egypt with Queen Scota and King Gaythelos- circa 1200 BC. See Scotichronicon or the Labor Gabala histories. Or see book: Scota, Egyptian Queen of the Scots. R
R1b-L21 n8iveuropean sites google
What does BCE mean?
Before the Common Era ( BCE ) Or sometimes Before the Christian Era . It refers to any time before the Birth of Christ , the old BC .
Interesting rebranding of well known Viking "invasion" as now politically modified "migration". I was hoping for history meets science, not a political ideology ! But then again with the RCSI hosting. A subversive foreign organisation that should have been proscribed a very long time ago ! Interesting how he contradicts ancient Irish books like the "Book of the Four Masters", and "Lebor na hUidre" (the book of Dun cow) etc.
I recommend that you read 'Catastrophe ' for a finer POV re: the words 'political ' and 'migration' or 'invasion'. Right now we are seeing migration as a result of extreme weather conditions. You cannot say that these people are 'invading'. Perhaps over time, depending on the success of those desperate people to survive and become a part of their new home, you might call it an 'invasion'. 'Politics', on the other hand, would be a late comer to the blending. That would be dependent upon which DNA (OVER TIME) became dominant. 😊
@@carolinegray7510 Are you saying the criminal males being sent here of Military age, now at least 120k of them, are here because of the weather ? LOL. I can say what ever I desire within reason, and within fair law. You seem to be used to telling people what they can say, and likely, now what they even think. Nuts ! Have you been diagnosed the NPD ? As RE "extreme weather". Irish people have never consented to 'Geo-Engineering' (look it up) NATO/UN military Weather-warfare crimes, and would be adverse to it being done to anyone else. By your language, you present as coming from an imperial marxist ideology. As regards to 'your' mythological implied fake-debt mind-control system. Very few people are now susceptible, and with the witnessing of the intimidation violence now used on indigenous Irish people, carried out by the Garda Corporation, and by the genocidal foreign corporations you represent.
I’ve been very interested in all things related to history, especially family history all my life. So, when I had the chance to send in my DNA, I sent it to 23andMe. Later, I was able to upload to Ancestry and My Heritage. My ancestors were pretty much all each colonial American settlers, with the exception of one set of Great-grandparents from Tipperary in Ireland. My 23andMe shows me at 99.7 Irish and British and under that umbrella parts of Scotland seem to be included. Ancestry has me at 43 percent England and NW Europe, Ireland 34 percent, Scotland 24 percent. But, MyHeritage has me at 44.5percent Scandinavian, Irish, Scottish, and Welsh 43.2, and 11.5 percent Iberian. I’m thinking they are calling the English and NW Europe as Scandinavian and the ancient Irish that is similar to the basque as Iberian.
SOLSTICE Through the long dark chambers in the hollow hills, Pagan voices, echoing in the corbelled spaces, Vanished in the twilight of unremembered souls, Forgotten rituals left their distant traces. In clever corridors, now closed to winter chill, Bats roost where ancient men once mourned, Till the Sun would shine its benediction still On the darkest day when, waiting for the dawn, The solstice priests and pilgrims in the night Would gather in the mound's sacred demesne, At the deep recess that had not seen the light, To witness that dark places can be blessed On this most hallowed day of all renewal; In the majesty of the fulcrum of the year, At the nadir of heaven's sacred jewel The patient ghosts of the newly dead drew near And, through the sure compelling power of the rite, In sorrow, cherished loved ones bound up tight, In the alchemy of the dark and light, The souls of the departed would take flight. "Solstice" by Etienne Muller
My father was a Turkey.
dont you like him
I think the language is flawed! Migrants is not a geo historically correct term any more. These people were pioneers and ground breaking explorers fighting for survival.. the “migration” was a slow transition and not a direct invasion of the land.
And calling them ‘pioneers and ground breaking explorers’ sounds like something you’d hear in a Hollywood blockbuster, imo.
Let me tell you,it was , invaded , my family had to to change it's surname under British plantation, in order to keep our land and home, back then.
Talking about later migration
My Irish parents immigrated to new Zealand 65 years ago they had to pay back the farmer who payed their ship fare ,they worked for a year before they got payed a cent,yes meat,milk and my dad had a good vegie garden but they did the hard yards and have made new Zealand the home to me and my sibling
Surely the claim that the British genetic signature in Ireland is all a result of the Plantation is contradicted by the fact that it is almost exclusively linked to Donegal. "The Plantation" encouraged migration from across the whole country but that is not what you are showing. Remember, northern Ireland has been close to Scotland for a very long time and has been politically united before (eg under the Ul Neills).
The populations were seriously separated by religion until fairly recently. No Protestant wanted to marry a Catholic and vice versa. The Catholics remained closer to the original Irish.
@@lisajackson1964 Well I'm a Protestant that married an Irish Catholic and never had any problems because of it, not ever.