I live about 200 metres from Baldongan Castle where, in June 1642, a 200-strong garrison of Irish rebels were put to the sword by English Parliamentary forces. The events surrounding the massacre stem from the Irish Rebellion of 1641, an uprising initiated in a time of deteriorating conditions in Ireland, which was under English rule, and a breakdown in relations between the English king, Charles I, and the English parliament. The 1641 rebellion in Ireland was undertaken in support of the king against the parliament, as the Irish feared that they would lose property and status if the powers of the king were limited and parliament prevailed. The parliament included a man who would be remembered in infamy in many parts of Ireland, Oliver Cromwell, prior to his brutal conquest of Ireland, which began in 1649 (with the infamous Drogheda Massacre).
Archive of posts tagged Trinity College
Baldongan Castle, 1642, the Irish Rebellion of 1641 and Trinity College Dublin
31 October 2010, 1:06 pm
Filed under Internet, Trinity College Dublin.
Tagged 1641, Arts and Humanities Research Council, Baldongan Castle, Charles I, Democratic Unionist Party, Dr. Ian Paisley, Drogheda, Drogheda Massacre, Dublin, DUP, English parliament, Europe, Fingal, Geography, House of Lords, Ian Paisley, Ireland, Ireland 1536–1691, Ireland in Turmoil: The 1641 Depositions, Irish Rebellion, Irish Research Council of the Humanities and Social Sciences, King Charles, Long Room, Lord Bannside, Mary McAleese, Old Library, Oliver Cromwell, Politics, President of Ireland, Republic of Ireland, Skerries, TCD, Trinity College, Trinity College Dublin, United Kingdom, University of Aberdeen, University of Cambridge, University of Dublin, Wars of the Three Kingdoms
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Social Media Revolution? What’s Your View?
9 May 2010, 5:47 pm
This interesting and very cleverly done video had had over 70,000 views since being posted in the past few days on YouTube. It is also generating the usual mix of light and heat in the accompanying comments. Whatever one’s personal views about Social Media, I think it would be foolish to ignore the reality and [...]
Filed under Social Media.
Tagged Cio Connect, collaboration, Communication, data privacy, Media, privacy, sharing, Social Media, TCD, teaching, Trinity College, video, youtube
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