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Irish Linen Centre & Lisburn Museum
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 4 ก.ย. 2014
Children of veterans have their say: Sticking To Our Own
Children of veterans have their say: part of Lisburn Museum’s Veteran Life: untold stories project.
มุมมอง: 9
วีดีโอ
Children of veterans have their say: Dad Deployment
มุมมอง 628 วันที่ผ่านมา
Children of veterans have their say: part of Lisburn Museum’s Veteran Life: untold stories project.
Children of veterans have their say: Remembrance And Memorial
มุมมอง 1728 วันที่ผ่านมา
Children of veterans have their say: part of Lisburn Museum’s Veteran Life: untold stories project.
Children of veterans have their say: Lack Of Support
มุมมอง 1028 วันที่ผ่านมา
Children of veterans have their say: part of Lisburn Museum’s Veteran Life: untold stories project.
Children of veterans have their say: Growing Up Too Soon
มุมมอง 928 วันที่ผ่านมา
Children of veterans have their say: part of Lisburn Museum’s Veteran Life: untold stories project.
Children of veterans have their say: Family Background
มุมมอง 1528 วันที่ผ่านมา
Children of veterans have their say: part of Lisburn Museum’s Veteran Life: untold stories project.
Children of veterans have their say: Dad PTSD
มุมมอง 19128 วันที่ผ่านมา
Children of veterans have their say: part of Lisburn Museum’s Veteran Life: untold stories project.
D-Day 90: ‘Lisburn and the Second World War’, by Scott Edgar
มุมมอง 1343 หลายเดือนก่อน
Want to find out what life was like in Lisburn during the Second World War? As we near the 80th anniversary of D-Day, this talk discusses the role of Northern Ireland in the war effort and the experience of everyday people - from rations to manufacturing, airfields to the blitz, and American GIs to Dad’s Army! Scott Edgar has been the driving force behind WartimeNI for the last 10 years, sparke...
D-Day 80: We fought on D-Day: Ulstermen in Normandy … their own words’, by Mark Scott
มุมมอง 523 หลายเดือนก่อน
We fought on D-Day: Ulstermen in Normandy … their own words’, by Mark Scott As we approach the 80th anniversary of the invasion of Europe, this talk draws on testimony from Northern Ireland veterans who took part in the D-Day operations. After researching their statements, never before disclosed details are revealed of action, triumph, and tragedy experienced by the men who were there. Mark Sco...
Lisburn's Barbour Family, the American Connection and Senator W. Warren Barbour with Richard Polton
มุมมอง 264 หลายเดือนก่อน
Richard Polton is a native of Paterson, New Jersey, USA, and an expert on local history. He has been actively engaged in research and public history projects on the Paterson story, delivering many lectures on the city’s development. A published author of books like ‘Paterson’s Industrial Age’ (2023), he also gives walking tours and has been involved with the Hamilton Partnership for Paterson, t...
Second World War and Lisburn with 'Wartime NI's' Scott Edgar
มุมมอง 294 หลายเดือนก่อน
Scott Edgar has been the driving force behind the amazing WartimeNI (wartimeni.com/) for the last 10 years, sparked by a love of local history and an inspiring visit to Normandy for the 70th anniversary of D-Day in 2014. His digital platform is the go-to place for info on all things Second World War-related in Northern Ireland. Scott joins us in the museum for a chat before his talk on Lisburn ...
D-Day 80: We fought on D-Day - Ulstermen in Normandy. a conversation with Mark Scott
มุมมอง 354 หลายเดือนก่อน
2024 marked the 80th anniversary of the invasion of Europe, and in this episode we chat with Mark Scott, author of a new book on D-Day, and the men from Ulster who served. The book draws on testimony from Northern Ireland veterans who took part in the D-Day operations. Mark Scott is a researcher and author of two publications, ‘The man who shot the Great War’ (2016) and ‘Among the kings - the u...
The Weaver Poet: Thomas Beggs, The Woven Word
มุมมอง 696 หลายเดือนก่อน
A 360° video series immersing you in the world of Ulster’s Rhyming Weavers - Ulster-Scots poets who flourished over the 18th & 19th Centuries. In this episode, filmed at the museum, we hear about Thomas Beggs, a poet born in 1789. For much of his life Beggs alternated between employment and periods devoted to writing. He published his first book aged 30 - ‘Miscellaneous Pieces in Verse’. Other ...
‘Vita Leonis, Robert Blair Mayne and the founding of the SAS' by Peter Forbes
มุมมอง 3.8K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
Robert Blair ‘Paddy’ Mayne was born in Newtownards, Northern Ireland, and had a colourful career - soldier, sportsman, and founding member of the Special Air Service. What was Mayne’s action-packed life like? What was the legacy of the so-called ‘Irish Lion’? Peter Forbes has been a secondary school teacher for over thirty years, and has worked extensively on Paddy Mayne’s life contributing to ...
Ghosts in the museum? Henry Munro, 1798 and Lisburn with Ken Dawson
มุมมอง 557 หลายเดือนก่อน
Join us as we chat with author and historian Ken Dawson on all things 1798. Who was Henry Munro? Why does 1798 matter? Find out!
Robert Blair Mayne and the founding of the SAS with Peter Forbes
มุมมอง 1757 หลายเดือนก่อน
Robert Blair Mayne and the founding of the SAS with Peter Forbes
Irish Linen Centre & Lisburn Museum by University of Atypical (BSL)
มุมมอง 697 หลายเดือนก่อน
Irish Linen Centre & Lisburn Museum by University of Atypical (BSL)
Irish Linen Centre & Lisburn Museum by University of Atypical (ISL)
มุมมอง 247 หลายเดือนก่อน
Irish Linen Centre & Lisburn Museum by University of Atypical (ISL)
'Henry Monro, Lisburn and 1798' with Ken Dawson
มุมมอง 2147 หลายเดือนก่อน
'Henry Monro, Lisburn and 1798' with Ken Dawson
Myths of the Nine' Years (1593-1693) with Dr Jim O'Neill
มุมมอง 388 หลายเดือนก่อน
Myths of the Nine' Years (1593-1693) with Dr Jim O'Neill
Everyday life in Ancient Egypt with Dr Sarah Doherty
มุมมอง 438 หลายเดือนก่อน
Everyday life in Ancient Egypt with Dr Sarah Doherty
'Daily Life in ancient Egypt' with Dr Sarah K Doherty
มุมมอง 2708 หลายเดือนก่อน
'Daily Life in ancient Egypt' with Dr Sarah K Doherty
The Nine Years' War: A Miserable and Beggardly War with Dr James O'Neill
มุมมอง 2708 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Nine Years' War: A Miserable and Beggardly War with Dr James O'Neill
Egypt: Land of the Gods, Pharaohs, and Wonderful Things‘ with Dr Ken Griffin, The Egypt Centre
มุมมอง 702ปีที่แล้ว
Egypt: Land of the Gods, Pharaohs, and Wonderful Things‘ with Dr Ken Griffin, The Egypt Centre
‘The Life and Times of Takabuti in Ancient Egypt and in Belfast’ with Prof Eileen Murphy, QUB
มุมมอง 393ปีที่แล้ว
‘The Life and Times of Takabuti in Ancient Egypt and in Belfast’ with Prof Eileen Murphy, QUB
A conversation with Prof Eileen Murphy on the Belfast Mummy, Takabuti
มุมมอง 278 หลายเดือนก่อน
A conversation with Prof Eileen Murphy on the Belfast Mummy, Takabuti
A conversation with Dr Ken Griffin of the Egypt Centre, Swansea
มุมมอง 138 หลายเดือนก่อน
A conversation with Dr Ken Griffin of the Egypt Centre, Swansea
'Hieroglyphs: unlocking ancient Egypt' with Dr Ilona Regulski, Curator at the British Museum
มุมมอง 13Kปีที่แล้ว
'Hieroglyphs: unlocking ancient Egypt' with Dr Ilona Regulski, Curator at the British Museum
Why are we interested in ancient Egyptian burials? Q&A with British Museum Curator Dr Ilona Regulski
มุมมอง 234ปีที่แล้ว
Why are we interested in ancient Egyptian burials? Q&A with British Museum Curator Dr Ilona Regulski
Did the Egyptians know about the Rosetta stone? Q&A with British Museum Curator Dr Ilona Regulski
มุมมอง 189ปีที่แล้ว
Did the Egyptians know about the Rosetta stone? Q&A with British Museum Curator Dr Ilona Regulski
She lost a little credibility with me the moment I saw her using an HP laptop.
Before spinning wheels like this existed to make yarn more quickly, every sail on every ship had to be painstakingly made on a drop spindle. No wonder oar-powered galleys were the standard for so long!
All I can say, he is was a legend.
Wouldn't sign language for the deaf help in reading hieroglyphs?
Very interesting old footage, spoilt by the blaring orchestral (foreground!) music
Hylands House, the HQ of the Regiment, is in Chelmsford, rather than Cheltenham.
What kind of hair/wool are you using in this video?
It's flax!
cool
👍👍✌
Spinster!! 🤯
Egypt is in Africa, right? I wonder why there are no black people there? Interesting!
Probably because this lecture was held in Northern Ireland, where 97% of the people belong to a white ethnic group. Or perhaps because Egypt is situated in North Africa, whose people tend to identify with the Arab world, and typically are closer in appearance to people of the Middle East than to people from Sub-Saharan Africa. Ultimately, though, based on the camera angle available to us as TH-cam viewers, it's hard to say for sure exactly what type of people are in attendance. Drawing such a conclusion requires surmising and stereotyping.
@@joadbreslin5819 My Great Great Grandfather was an Irish Jew so what are you saying? I just asked a question!
Dr Ilona Regulski is so inspiring, she makes me want to learn how to read hieroglyphs. Only in my case, I have no reason to. 🤩
A few of my notes from this video: The British Museum started out in a Montagu house. The Rosetta Stone is a priestly decree drawn up in 196 BC. _I think the royals love the Rosetta Stone because they believe it helps justifies their standing. I don't know about the 28 or so copies they're finding. There's no way to prove they're legit, and there's no way to prove they're not. You can say carbon dating, but I'm not sure carbon dating is actually legitimate, and it wouldn't be able to tell us when a material was inscribed if it really does work the way they claim it does anyway. The Rosetta Stone is one of the reasons the royals love ancient Egypt. Plus, it is their bloodline that ruled over Egypt. They come from the Ptolemies and Cleos. It's interesting to me that some near-death experiences say the elites think they are gods. _ "The decree tells the priests how to treat the king as a god." Before Alexander the Great, the pharaohs were more like priests because they acted as intermediaries between the people and God. They didn't need a text to validate them. When this decree was drawn up in the 2nd Century BC, Egypt had become part of the Hellenistic Empire. The Greek rulers have been using written decrees since the 5th Century BC. "It's written in stone." Before the Ptolemies arrived in Egypt there were no written decrees. These decrees were carved from Ptolemy III to Ptolemy VI. At 55:00 the photographer doesn't show us the screen Dr Ilona Regulski is pointing at while she answers a question about which way to read the text, he just keeps the camera trained on her which means all the viewers of this video miss out on a key explanation. Dr Ilona Regulski did a fine job explaining what she had just pointed to with her lazer pointer but still, why do the photographers stop doing their jobs during the Q & A s all the time? This is always happening. Have they fallen asleep? Then Dr Ilona Regulski starts reading some of the Egyptian while pointing to it and he's not filming it, we can only see her. Otherwise, this was an amazing video and major kudos to Dr Ilona Regulski. She's an incredibly interesting Egyptologist.
Peter would disregard and gafaw on named as a local historian, your doing a good job not being one! Fantastic watch indeed on our local hero
Fascinating. Dr Ilona Regulski is exemplary at illuminating the past for us. 🌟
Amazing lecture. Thank you very much
There is only a way to decipher the hieroglyphs. You need two instruments: (1) the symbolic algorithm, (2) the Albanian Language. References: 1. The mesianic role of the Albanian Language by Petro Zheji 2. Albanian and Sanskrit Language by Petro Zheji 3. Thoth spoke Albanian by Giuseppe Catapano.
Could the albanian language have its roots in egypt scribes. Like they worked for or learned language from or are you suggesting Albania was the priest class, making them the exodus people. The information was secretive. The rosetta stone, which was Greek Arabic hieroglph and allowed modern scholars to crack the language of the gods. Oh shes going on about the rosetta now...dunno if shes gonna say, but the stone was discovered in a rubble pile of rocks that was reused in ancient times as a wall filler and was discovered by chance in the ruins by napoleans archeologist. And she kind of mentions what im saying.....one other thing lots of biblical sites were being destroyed and obstructed by archeologists.
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
What an impressive person
Very interesting presentation.
Wow!! This video is and the presentation is absolutely fantastic. What a truly inspiring insight to the Legend that is Lt Col. Blair Mayne. Thank you so much for posting this on TH-cam.
Love watching Dr. Regulski’s explanations - she is the uncommon expert that makes complicated subjects understandable to those of that are not experts.
Did you say “tea tile?” How big is that approximately? Googled it and found nothing ❤ great vid thank you!
Tea towel, roughly a meter square
What about that! I didn't know where the term 'spinster' came from. thanks for this presentation. All it is missing is spinning song. Greetings from Australia.
✌️ P R O M O S M
That is not the question asked in the video.
Good lecture with a lot of information, great venue but little detail and application
I didnt know you could wet your fingers... that makes a lot of sense now
It's very interesting hearing all the places i knew so well having been born and bred in Lisburn in 1970 and in the same talk hearing the names of places i have lived beside for the last 5yrs in Co.Kerry. Really good history lesson and much enjoyed
Amazing skill! And very informative video.
Amazing video, thank you. You are speaking as smoothly as you are spinning. I would enjoy listening you speaking for hours.
Was the yarn woven as singles or plied?
Jen Barber's dad!
Unfortunatly?
Ptolemaios (meaning) : Најживиот наш, тој на кого богот на небесната мајка му се восхитува
Here's how google translated that for me: "Our most alive, he whom the god of the heavenly mother admires."
@@itzakpoelzig330 yes, the translation is correct !
Merci pour cette intéressante et instructive conférence / leçon "the Rosette Stone". Pour plus d'informations concernant l'écriture hiératique/démotique, veuillez regarder la vidéo: „По трагите на Древномакедонското писмо„ Ecriture déchiffrée par les Macédoniens Aristotel Tentov, Tome Bosevski et leur successeur Saso Endrovski.
Ridiculous
@@Dragases6894 „...и ќе ја познаете вистината, и вистината ќе ве ослободи.„ Јован 8,32
This is the third video I’ve watched featuring Dr. Regulski. She is a captivating lecturer with such a broad base of knowledge. I’ll seek her out for more. Thanks for posting this.
Me too 😊
Amazing lecture. Thank you for sharing
Tombus was epic 😂😂😂
tumbles
I am distantly related to Takabuti, my mother's bloodline is Mito H4a1a3, which is downstream from the ancestor H4a1. My mother's line is from Wales but the interesting point to make about Haplogroup H4 is that it is very rare and mostly found in Europe today.
I am intrigued with all the information, the one that caught my attention is songs that spinners sing to keep the beat Would you be kind enough to share a few songs or words that spinners sing along with to keep the rhythm. Thank you for your help and understanding 🙏
I came here to see if someone had asked about the spinners' songs. I've met some of the Scottish "waulking" songs (used in the final stages of tweed preparation) but I've not heard the Irish spinning songs. The closest I think I've come to that is the Cores singing about the benefits of the sewing machine for young ladies.
The spinning wheel song (utube). Has the rhythm of the wheel going round.
great video, thanks for that.
How do i get the band to make the spindle move?
That wheel has what is called a double drive. That means that the drive band drives both the flyer (the U-shaped bit with the hooks on it that flies around the bobbin) and the bobbin. If the bobbin didn't move at all then the fibre would not get a chance to be twisted before the wheel tried to wind it onto the bobbin. If the bobbin moved at the same speed as the flyer then the yarn would be infinitely twisted and would never get wound onto the bobbin. So the spinner needs to find the sweet spot (which changes as the bobbin fills and which is different for different types of spinning and different fibres). The double drive is one of 3 main methods for enabling spinners to find those sweet spots. The others are Scotch tension which "puts a brake" on the bobbin and Irish tension which "puts a brake" on the flyer. The Scotch and Irish tensions use a single drive band. For most older wheels a piece of good quality cotton string will serve as a drive band, or some cotton yarn. While a single fine strand of linen yarn wouldn't do the job, a thicker, waxed, plied linen yarn would also do the job. Ashford spinning wheels sell spare bands, which are long enough to be used in double drive systems - other brands probably also sell replacement bands. Fun fact: that wheel is almost certainly only designed to be used to do a Z twist. This is because flax grown in the northern hemisphere prefers being spun with a Z twist.
Such a good talk! Dr Ilona Regulski presents her information in a way that is very understandable for someone like myself who has no background in the subject.
Great info! One question, when the thread broke how was it attached to the thread in the spindle?
1:29
Was a great wee town 😢
I just discovered that my ancestors the Laverty family were amongst the claimants for compensation whilst researching my ancestry with DNA, thanks to the conservation and research here.
Needs subtitles. Impossible to make out what is being said in the commentary. The music doesn’t help! Nice photography. Jarlath
hi, you can use the auto-generated captions.
"Those big triangles were built by that Moses dude back in the Fifties." - Prof. Butthead
whats your favorite thing that the government stole?