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History Now NVTV
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 23 ก.ย. 2013
History Now is a weekly history television show on Northern Visions Television in Belfast. Interviews with academic and professional historians, musicians, politicians.
1930s Belfast with Philip Orr and Seán Mitchell.
Barry Sheppard talks to writer Philip Orr and historian Seán Mitchell about 1930s Belfast and issues of identity.
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วีดีโอ
Tommy Graham editor of History Ireland magazine
มุมมอง 2492 ปีที่แล้ว
Barry Sheppard speaks to History Ireland editor, Tommy Graham about the origins and run of the successful history magazine.
Historical documentaries on Michael Davitt and the IRB.
มุมมอง 5182 ปีที่แล้ว
Barry Sheppard in conversation with Deaglan Ó Mocháin, history documentary maker with Dearcán Media, about his TG4 documentaries on Michael Davitt and the IRB.
Mapping the West Belfast UVF 1914-1918
มุมมอง 2382 ปีที่แล้ว
Professor Richard Grayson talks to Barry Sheppard about his digital mapping project, the Geography of Service and Death, looking at UVF members from East and West Belfast, 1913-18.
Irish republicanism, anti-Semitism and the post-war world with Dr Brian Hanley
มุมมอง 4602 ปีที่แล้ว
Barry Sheppard welcomes Dr Brian Hanley back to the show to discuss his research ‘The Irish and the Jews have a good deal in common’: Irish republicanism, anti-Semitism and the post-war world.
Mary Ann McCracken, Belfast radical abolitionist, with Paula Reynolds and Aaron McIntyre
มุมมอง 2522 ปีที่แล้ว
Barry Sheppard discusses the life of Belfast radical Mary Ann McCracken with Paula Reynolds and Aaron McIntyre from the Belfast Charitable Society.
The early years of Northern Ireland with Dr Alan Parkinson
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Historian Dr Alan Parkinson talks about the turbulent years of 1920 through to 1925 in the early development of Northern Ireland.
Commemoration in Loyalist communities - Dr Jonathan Evershed and Dr Gareth Mulvenna
มุมมอง 2732 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Jonathan Evershed and Dr Gareth Mulvenna talk to Dr Barry Sheppard about the role of commemoration in loyalist communities.
Second generation Irish and the cause of Ireland with Brian J. Dooley
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Barry Sheppard welcomes Irish human rights activist and author, Brian J. Dooley. Brian speaks about his book 'Choosing the Green? Second Generation Irish and the Cause of Ireland'.
Temperance in Belfast with Dr Órfhlaith Campbell
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Barry Sheppard welcomes Dr Órfhlaith Campbell to talk about her research on the Irish temperance movement of the nineteenth century.
Brother Walfrid, founder of Celtic Football Club - with Dr Michael Connolly #celtic #celticfc
มุมมอง 1.6K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Dr Michael Connolly speaks to Barry Sheppard about his recent PhD research into the founder of Celtic Football Club, Brother Walfrid. Discussing the great Irish Famine and the Irish diaspora in Scotland, Dr Connolly brings us the first ever doctoral research on Brother Walfrid, born Andrew Kerins in Ballymote, Co. Sligo in 1840.
Irish Election Propaganda - with Dr Elaine Callinan and Dr Martin O'Donoghue
มุมมอง 932 ปีที่แล้ว
Barry Sheppard welcomes Dr Martin O'Donoghue from University of Limerick and Dr Elaine Callinan to discuss Irish election propaganda.
The Sinn Féin election of 1918 - with Donal Fallon and Alan de Bromhead #Election #SinnFein #Ireland
มุมมอง 4372 ปีที่แล้ว
The 1918 General Election, sometimes known as the Sinn Féin Election, as the party won 73 out of 105 seats, saw the overwhelming defeat of the moderate nationalist Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP). The IPP had dominated Irish politics since the 1880s, and the landslide victory for Sinn Féin was a monumental shift towards separatism from London. The successful Sinn Féin candidates refused to take...
Michael Joseph Costello and the Irish War of Independence.
มุมมอง 4012 ปีที่แล้ว
Michael Joseph Costello took part in the War of Independence of 1919-1921 and fought in the Civil War of 1922-1923. Costello was appointed to Intelligence Officer of the Third Southern Command by Michael Collins when he was 18 years old, and went on to become Director of Intelligence of the Free State Army, aged just twenty. His grandson, Brian Costello speaks to Barry Sheppard about Michael's ...
Irish music history - Conor McCaffrey and Stuart Bailie
มุมมอง 2332 ปีที่แล้ว
Music journalists and historians Conor McCaffrey and Stuart Bailie join Barry Sheppard to talk about Irish music history.
Hilary Dully on Irish revolutionary Máire Comerford
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Hilary Dully on Irish revolutionary Máire Comerford
Stalin and contemporary Russia, with Dr Alexander Titov #Russia
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Stalin and contemporary Russia, with Dr Alexander Titov #Russia
Irish Magdalene Laundries with Dr Leanne McCormick and Professor Sean O'Connell.
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Irish Magdalene Laundries with Dr Leanne McCormick and Professor Sean O'Connell.
Irish theatre and marginalized histories with Barry Houlihan
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Irish theatre and marginalized histories with Barry Houlihan
The history of Fine Gael with Dr Ciara Meehan.
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The history of Fine Gael with Dr Ciara Meehan.
The Ulster Crisis 1912-1914 with Prof Fearghal McGarry and Dr Graham Brownlow #History #Ireland
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The Ulster Crisis 1912-1914 with Prof Fearghal McGarry and Dr Graham Brownlow #History #Ireland
Catholicism and politics in Mozambique with Dr Eric Morier-Genoud
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Catholicism and politics in Mozambique with Dr Eric Morier-Genoud
The United Irishmen, remembering and forgetting 1798 with Guy Beiner and Peter Collins
มุมมอง 1.6K2 ปีที่แล้ว
The United Irishmen, remembering and forgetting 1798 with Guy Beiner and Peter Collins
History Now - The Irish Civil War and the border #Ireland #History #Partition #CivilWar
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History Now - The Irish Civil War and the border #Ireland #History #Partition #CivilWar
History Now - Evangelical America with Professor Crawford Gribben
มุมมอง 2282 ปีที่แล้ว
History Now - Evangelical America with Professor Crawford Gribben
Diarmaid Ferriter on the Irish border and Ireland's islands. #History
มุมมอง 3.1K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Diarmaid Ferriter on the Irish border and Ireland's islands. #History
The Troubles and the Republic of Ireland with Dr Brian Hanley #History #Ireland
มุมมอง 6812 ปีที่แล้ว
The Troubles and the Republic of Ireland with Dr Brian Hanley #History #Ireland
History Now - Seamus Heaney, Listen Now Again with Sophie Doyle. #SeamusHeaney #Literature #History
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History Now - Seamus Heaney, Listen Now Again with Sophie Doyle. #SeamusHeaney #Literature #History
The life and work of Brendan Behan with Donal Fallon #BrendanBehan #Ireland #History
มุมมอง 9052 ปีที่แล้ว
The life and work of Brendan Behan with Donal Fallon #BrendanBehan #Ireland #History
Admiral Brown, who founded the Argentinian navy, came from Foxford in County Mayo.
They are Joe Biden’s fellow Irish heritage and Pope Francis’ fellow Argentine citizens
I don't speak Spanish. But i know a little. Love that he pronounced the city of Medillin in Argie Spanish. This chap is all in.
Excellent, I enjoyed that very much.
Parece interesante la entrevista, pero no entiendo una goma.
Irish and all immigrants arrived in Argentina were welcome. Nice interview, it seems very good research about argentine-irish history
I went to first year of secondary school at the father Fahy´s school. It was a boarding school.
I can clearly sense how this writer starts on the premise and the prejudice of considering Peronism and its implications as a program of so called distribution of wealth. From that on, all his approach is tinted with this focus and his conclusions are based upon false assumptions. The Peronist Civil War started in 1973 when both sides of Peronism started to kill each other. It didn’t start all in 1976 as he suggested
Aú no lo ví, y ya sé que la tres cuartos de esto es verso.
My grandfather on my mother’s side of the family was born in Argentina in Baradero province of Buenos Aires. His father was an Irish that established himself in Argentina and was a cattleman. His name was Patrick Whelan and he arrived to Argentina around 1863. My grandfather left his mother after Patrick died because she remarried a Spanish man who was a gambler, and good for nothing. My grandfather was 10 years old he still saw his brother but otherwise never learnt English and never saw his father again.My grandfather moved to Cordoba in Argentina and always kept his love for Ireland that he had heard of and never seen. Meanwhile he was good catholic and very successful with his company in the metallurgical industry ,. He was a very hard worker raised a family of 4 children and eventually one day he tried hard to lear English or enough to be able to visit the land of his Father. I believe it was a special moment for him to find his roots. During the 2 nd World war the Whelan part of my family was pro allies and funny enough my father’s family was Italian and had more sympathy then for I’ll Duce. But neither family was antisemitic . I fact this was more evident then in Europe Italy Germany England and France where antisemitic and more so. Than Argentina that was a county of immigration.I went to British schools in Argentina Christian by the names St.Peter’s and St Andrew’s from the English and Scottish communities that needed to have their own language and education system. In these schools a good 30 % of the students and school mates and friends were jewish . This is not to say that there was no antisemitism at all in Argentina. The Peronist government that was hated by both my families Italian or Irish was totally pro Axis. My Irish Argentine grandad opened an Icecream parkour the name was Heladería Irlanda. Icecream parlor Ireland. He was very proud of his origin.
They left many good things in our country. The greatest hero of the seas: ADMIRAL BROWN. And a lot of beautiful red haired women.❤
Has anyone ever researched the Irish component of the Afrikaans-speaking community in South Africa? My grandfather’s second wife was an O’Neill from the NW Transvaal. Her brother was headmaster of a well known Afrikaans high school in Krugersdorp, west of Johannesburg.
Yeah mate a lot came to Australia
I am 4th generation of pure Irish descende living in Bs Aires and 31 years ago, I married a nice little girl .... also 4th generation of pure Irish descendent. ☘️
SPANISH Subtitles ????
Si tiene. Yo recien termine de ver el video con subtitulos en español
Very interesting unknown history. We should reinstate History in schools. young people are ignorant and easily influenced by activists with agenda.
One half of the world is Irish, and the other half would like to be!
A lot of the Irish in Argentina speak with a Mullingar accent
The Argentine people hold a great respect towards the Irish nation and his people. One of our national heroes is William Brown, an Irish sailor who fought for our nation. It even has a football team which honors his name "Club Atletico Almirante Brown"
Y así se llama el Liceo Naval, Almirante Guillermo Brown
I'm a quarter irish from My grandmother, despite that, personally I discovered that My personality in many aspects is very irish lol, ALSO italian haha very shorts fuse haha
Sabes? Cuando fue la guerra de Malvinas y los ingleses tomaron prisioneros a soldados argentinos ,entre ellos había galeses, muy asombrados preguntaron porque pelearon contra ellos y respondieron Porque somos argentinos y es nuestra Patria. Eso lo contó un oficial inglés. Es una comunidad grande que vive en el sur, descendientes de galeses obvio❤
Mi amiga es de apellido Murray, su bisabuelo proviene de Irlanda. Amo a los irlandeses,tenemos mucho en común, nuestro fanatismo por nuestro país y orgullo. Mi hermano iba a un colegio irlandés de curas irlandeses, que aún existe en la ciudad donde nací. Me encanta cuando festejan el día de San Patricio, hoy en día también se juntan con argentinos en un bar irlandes de Buenos Aires. ❤
How many Irish were there ?Welsh Argentines are well known .late 1890s big imigration from everywhere in Europe ..
Great show , very enlightening.
La historia que contó sobre Camila O' Gorman y el padre Ladislao fue filmada en Argentina y nominada para el Óscar, quizás se pueda ver en algún lado
Excellent thank you. ❤
County Longford, in the Irish midlands had many people that went to the Argentine. A family named Duffy were well known in Public office there. Bundaberg Mayor?
Arturo KENNY distinguished himself and his country of birth, Argentina, as Olympic Polo Champions in 1924, in Paris! The first Gold Medal in our history.
El padrino de mi viejo! Abzo.
Would you do a video on the Irish which migrated to Southern Africa.
Sin convalidar el accionar ilegal de las fuerzas del estado, debemos recordar que Rodolfo Walsh estuvo muy directamente vinculado a la bomba que los Montoneros hicieron explotar en el comedor de la policía que dejó 23 muertos y multiples heridos.
I can distinguish there's no intended bias when Dr. Patrick Speight uses "dirty war" to refer to the 1976-1983 dictatorship anti subversion "campaign" (annihilation), but that was (an still is) the subtle way to put both sides at the same level of responsibility when they are not. So... there was no war, neither a clean nor dirty one.
Mis bisabuelos eran irish, yo argentino, emigré a México, tengo hijos mexicanos. Todo es movimiento. La tierra es de todos
Muy bueno. Recomendable la película Camila (1984) de María Luisa Bemberg
Camila O'gorman, the granddaughter of an Irish trader who settled in Buenos Aires at the end of the 18th century. Camila belonged to the second richest family in Buenos Aires and she was executed after it was found out she got pregnant of a priest. A very sad story during Rosas times.
I saw a documentary on the Irish Argentinians and they were absolutely beautiful looking people. Blue or green eyes long brownish hair , olive skin . Just magnificent.
Notable beauties.
Yeah, we're truly a joy to look at. :p
Rodolfo Walsh was in the 70" part of a terrorist group call MONTONEROS that killed houndreds or argentines . He organize ,among many terrorist acts, the bombimg oina dinners hall blongs to the police, where died 36 argentines. Besides a good writer he was a beter assasain.
One of the gratest hero of our independence was admiral Guillermo Brown, from Ireland. He fight braverly agains the spanish Empire from 1811 to 1818, mainly in the River Plate scenario. And beat them many times. 10years later he fougth against the Brazilian Empire and beat them many times.
Perón dijo que tal vez él no había sido bueno, pero que los que vinieron después que él, fueron infinitamente peor. Rodolfo Walsh descubrió esa verdad investigando para sus libros y por eso después de 1955, fue volcándose a la izquierda, al igual que toda su generación.
Rodolfo Walsh was fighting for montoneros a terrorista organización who were fightin and trained by the cuban regime(comunist)
What a beautiful and very interesting interview!!!!
My grandad was a radical anti-Peronista just because he was an honest worker and didn't wanted any gifts from the state or government.
QUÉ TIPO PELOTU..DO!! TU ABUELO Y VOS!!
To be honest, women haven't been very impressive so far in any of the leaderships you mentioned. Also, any kind of constructive criticism of female representatives is met automatically with the gender card and deliberately regarded as sexistcand misogynistic attacks! While Equality of opportunities is absolutely admirable, equality of outcomes and deliberate gender quotas has led to the underwhelming, to say the least, quality of female representation, such as the ones you mentioned at the outset,.... M.
Thank so much it makes me feel so happy that the Irish are more just pototo pickers or whiskey and Guinness drinkers The document makes me want too find out so much more why Catholicismin has been so much more than Just a Religious way life 😔
interesante por cierto ... no lo sabia !
Ireland 🤝🏻 Argentina = hate towards english crown
Met a guy from Argentina in Galway years ago how was researching his family three, his great great grandmother had emigrated to Argentina from Galway and he told me that when she arrived in Argentina she only spoke Irish and no English at all. I found out conversation fascinating.
*tree
3
It is fair to say that Rodolfo Walsh was an important member of the terrorist group called Montoneros , and he is directly responsable of murdered people with a bomb placed in a dinner room were civil personnel of the police headquerters in Buenos Aires was having lunch , In other words he was an assasin .
Para ser declarado culpable de asesino debería haber sido juzgado y condenado por un juez. Lamentablemente nunca vamos a poder saber si era un asesino o no porque fue asesinado y su cuerpo desaparecido.
Yes it’s has been proof , is in documents that been published on books , like the ones of J B Jofre .
@@JBGLXah, mirá que bueno. "Lo leí en un libro que tal es culpable ..." Falleció el estado de derecho.
@@lucianospaccesi7900 … documents published on books ! No such a thing “ estado de derecho “ is present in a military goverment . Clearly you admire Walsh , so why dont you do yourself a favor , and fly to La Havana , from Walsh wanted to “ import” to Argentina their way of running a country … comunism . And check by yourself how people lives there . Sorry , this was my las comment .
@@JBGLX si como decís "no existe el estado de derecho en un gobierno militar" entonces estás reconociendo que un grupo de delincuentes se hizo con las atribuciones del estado y que por consiguiente los supuestos delitos de un particular son cosa muy menor al lado de los crímenes de estado de la junta militar. Mi país es Argentina y todavía no nació el Inglés o yanki que me venga a decir donde tengo que vivir.
Fascinating
It was not a dirty war, it was the military government committing crimes against humanity. They kidnap and disappear 30k people. They remain as disappear as of today, because the military never gave information about their whereabouts. The military also took the children of the disappear and raised as their own. There are grandmothers still looking for their grandchildren.
Very interesting. It would be interesting to know how the Irish-Argentine Community related to the Anglo-Argentine community. Were the Irish also in the upper, monied tier of Argentine society? Are the Irish today essentially a middle class group, or are there poor Irish Argentines in any numbers? To what degree have they kept themselves separate from Hispano-Italian Argentines?
There are people of Irish extraction in all levels of society. I'm living here the past two years and have met Irish-Argentine farmers, academics, veterinarians, priests, business people, landowners and more. The Irish wave of immigration was on the decline by the 1890's, its an old wave of immigration and most have integrated long ago and become criollo. They have a name for money now and many do have a lot of land/money, but many are regular folk too & those that integrated (and became mixed) are in all levels of society. I think the rich stereotype comes from the fact that those that do have land/money have a louder voice in the country and are very integral, and in fact seminal, parts of their respective towns and regions. Those left as a community often tend to be involved in agriculture, places like General Las Heras, San Antonio del Areco, Capilla del Señor. I even met a black taxi driver in Buenos Aires whose name was Coleman, he called me brother and "compatriota" (once I told him I was Irish), he said he was the only black Irish in the city jajaja
@@CharlieOBrienTF Many thanks for that. Very interesting.
just a fact to consider: Irish immigrants traveling to Argentina had to pay five times more than those heading to New York. This meant only those with financial stability, land to buy, or a secured job made the journey. Most achieved great success. Interestingly, the 'Irish purity' was diluted after the third generation, as Irish men sought beautiful Catholic wives, often finding them among Hispanic and Italian women. Cheers, Fernando Keena.
@@Fernando-qw8qt Italian migrant workers could earn enough in Argentina to go and return annually. There was a special Argentine name for them.
@@markaxworthy2508 There were many Italian immigrants, around 4 million and among them you have all kinds, from the north, from the south, with very different luck or destinations, one is the Pope, another the best football player, but I don't know the names of those who they came back They would be those "who made La America". But think that it is estimated that 65% of the 48 million Argentines have at least one of the 4 grandparents of Italian origin. I AM one of them
I had always maintained that Argentina was the only place outside the Anglosphere where the Irish emigrated in any numbers. To learn that on arriving in Argentina they mostly went to work for English companies modifies that assumption.
They tried hard to keep their identity, and heritage, a little known fact here in Buenos Aires is that the football club Ferrocarril Oeste was founded by the Irish workers of the western-bound Argentine railway, and that they "battled" with thier bosses until they finally managed to have the club use green in thier shirts as homage to Ireland, (unknow by the English as Ireland was undergoing a "civil war" trying to gain independence from the British). To this day, the club's main entrance has 4 statues representing Ireland, Wales, Scotland and England.
@@efudoishido7480 You say, "They tried hard to keep their identity, and heritage". So they were resistant to integration into wider Argentine society?
@@markaxworthy2508 Nope, what he meant (I'm an Argie) means simply that, like all the other immigrant communities, they took pride in having their own social institutions and marrying within the community. But intermixing with Spaniards and Italians and what not was unavoidable, because of law of sheer numbers. On the other hand, when Irish people in Argentina went to work (or were brought to work for English companies it was mainly because of the common English language and shared English/British ways of doing things (nothing to do with siesta/mid-afternoon naps as we do in Spain and Italy, being punctual, and so on). It doesn't mean that the Irish "submitted" in some way or another to the English. Keep in mind, although proud of their Irish identity, these irish folks had NOT suffered the famine and that, althoug surely resentful of English dominance over Ireland, did not hate the English per se, they probably regarded themselves as Irish British, which was the norm in Ireland herself despite the struggle for independence, in the sense that British way of thinking and doing things was already effectively ingrained in the Irish mentality. No "true Irish Celt" mentality was left in any of Ireland by the 1800s, adn presumably even before then. Ireland have been Anglicised enough, not completely, but enough.
Why Irish did not settled in Brazil in the 1840s because Brazil is a Catholic country and Chile was founded by an Irish hero
@@vernicejillmagsino9603 If you mean Bernardo O'Higgins, he was only half Irish and had never seen Ireland. He was born in Chile where his father was the Spanish military Governor and later Viceroy of Peru. His mother was local. O'Higgins typifies the Irish situation in the Americas under Spain where they arrived as part of the ruling Spanish colonial administration. All three Irish regiments served as part of the garrison of the Spanish colonies in the second half of the 19th Century and another Irishman wrote the militia regulations used across Spanish America. It is often forgotten that the Irish were more upholders of Spain's administration of the Americas than opponents of it.