Free Lunch Time Talks all Summer in the National Library of Ireland

30 Aug 16 to 01 Sep 16

The Summer Talks at lunchtime will take place every Tuesday and Thursday 1-2pm in the National Library of Ireland. Here are the speakers for week six of the talks.

Clodagh Tait

The simple annals of my Parish poor’: stories from the parish registers

Tuesday August 30th

Time: 1pm

Venue: National Library of Ireland 

The Reverend George Crabbe, a Church of England clergyman, published his poem The Parish Register in 1807. For him, his registers were ‘The simple annals of my Parish poor’, and he reflected on the human stories behind his entries within them, concluding rather gloomily that for his parishioners ‘Their joys come seldom and their pains pass slow’. The destruction of so many of Ireland’s historical records in the Public Records Office in 1922 and on other occasions makes the surviving parish registers, however ‘simple’ (and partial) the information they contain, a hugely informative source for the study of communities in the past. However, there seems to be limited appreciation of their treasures. Though the National Library’s Catholic Parish Registers online has rightly been hailed as an important resource for those interested in genealogy and family history, little mention has been made of the huge potential of these records as sources for demographic, social and cultural history - along with the earlier Catholic registers and the surviving registers of the Church of Ireland and other Protestant denominations that have not yet been digitised in any coherent manner. This is despite the insights provided by the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure’s work on English parish registers, and the fact that several historians and geographers have already used Irish registers as sources for the study of communities in, for example, Wicklow, Dublin, Wexford and Derry. This paper therefore is a plea for greater use of the parish registers, using case studies to highlight some of the ways in which they can cast light on the joys and pains of Catholic and Protestant parishioners from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. Among other things, the registers reveal valuable information on topics like illegitimate birth and parenthood; the role of networks of friendship and association within communities; courtship, marriage, family formation, birth spacing and child rearing; and details of causes of death, especially in infancy and as a result of epidemic disease.

 

Clodagh Tait is a lecturer in the Department of History, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick. She is the author of Death, Burial and Commemoration in Ireland 1550-1650 and co-editor of Age of Atrocity: Violence and Political Conflict in Early Modern Ireland  and Religion and Politics in Urban Ireland: Essays in Honour of Colm Lennon. She has published articles on a variety of topics relating to death, violence, riot, commemoration, mortality rates, Catholic devotion, martyrdom, childbirth, baptism and naming in early modern Ireland.

 

Nora White

Ogham Stones – our earliest genealogical sources

Thursday September 1st 

Time: 1pm

Venue: National Library of Ireland 

Our very earliest recording of personal and kindred names occurs, not as you might expect in vellum manuscripts, but on stone: Ogham stones. Over four hundred inscriptions in the ogham alphabet record the names of our ancestors hundreds of years before genealogies were written in manuscripts. Some of these names are still in use today. Modern technology is now being used to record these stones and perhaps shed new light on some very old inscriptions.

 

Nora White graduated from Maynooth University in 2001 with a BA in History and Old and Middle Irish/Medieval Irish Studies. She went on to edit a group of early Irish texts for her PhD at the same University, before being awarded an O’Donovan Scholarship in the School of Celtic Studies at DIAS in 2006. Since 2010, she has held the position of Principal Investigator on the Ogham in 3D project.


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