Civil authority reasserted quickly in 1924
The 1924 Army mutiny resulted in important changes in the Cosgrave government which served to enhance the stability of the State…
The 1924 Army mutiny resulted in important changes in the Cosgrave government which served to enhance the stability of the State…
Today marks the 80th anniversary of the inaugural meeting of the Free StateParliament in Leinster House on December 6th, 1922…
Important aspects of the life and times of Ireland's first president, Douglas Hyde, are absent from a current television documentary…
Poor old George Bernard Shaw
The debate surrounding the 90th anniversary of 1916 tends to forget about one important group of participants - women
The people of Ireland do not constitute an Irish nation today, any more than they did in 1916, writes Dennis Kennedy
Tim Pat Coogan replies to some assertions made recently about the historical legacy of Éamon de Valera.
Plunkett possessed an honourable social consciousness, and endures as an artist through his great Dublin novel, writes EILEEN…
In a sense, Dublin never quite seceded from the British empire, but seems to gaze forlornly across the Irish Sea, writes JOHN…
Tennis: The story of how two tennis champions survived the Titanic and went on to be members of the sport’s Hall of Fame is …
EILEEN BATTERSBY ponders ‘Titanic’ and Gunther Grass
One batch of mementos of the strinken liner held by a US company has been valued at more than €144m, while items in Britain and…
While the First Minister declared it a ‘must-see’, it remains to be seen if the attraction will last, writes FINOLA MEREDITH…
The Constitution came into force 70 years ago today
Sixteen British soldiers were in the GPO during the Easter Rising, writes Wesley Boyd
My grandfather's time in the GPO was part of a lifelong struggle, writes Eoin Ryan.
Home Rule would have made us dependent; we got out from under British rule just in time, writes Garret FitzGerald.
It was essentially nascent fascist sentiments which drove the leaders of the 1916 Rising, writes Lord Laird.
Eoin Neeson writes about one of the most tragic and controversial events in modern Irish history
Giant furniture, ho-hum paintings, and a curatorial reshuffle: the Mac, Belfast’s ambitious new arts centre, needs a clear direction…
THE NOTION that the nationalist community in Belfast during the 1920s was subjected to a pogrom does not stand up, it was argued…
Sir, – Further to your recent correspondence referring to John Redmond, perhaps it should be recorded that Michael Davitt (not…
COMMEMORATIONS: THERE DOES not have to be a consensus about historical commemorations, Prof Diarmaid Ferriter told the Burren…
Metropolitan Arts Centre, Belfast
IRISH CRUISE specialists have a bad feeling about plans by an Australian billionaire to offer cruises on a replica of the Titanic…
FORMER TAOISEACH John Bruton yesterday unveiled a monument erected at Woodenbridge, Co Wicklow, to mark the speech which John…
POLITICIANS Éamon de Valera and John Dillon had a jaundiced view of the women’s suffrage movement, historians recounted at a …
Sir, – The Irish Times is to be congratulated on its commitment to furthering discussion of the events that transformed Ireland…
A CEREMONY held just after dawn in Dublin yesterday marked the 97th anniversary of Anzac Day, when Australian and New Zealand…
MINISTER FOR Tourism Leo Varadkar says he has asked Fáilte Ireland to carry out a study to assess whether the upper end of Dublin…
THE OPPORTUNITY to foster reconciliation and deepen mutual understanding provided by the current decade of centenaries should…
HISTORY: Many falsehoods persist about the fatal voyage of ‘Titanic’, including the notion that all first-class passengers were…
Sir, – While I wholeheartedly agree with Eoghan McSwiney’s (April 14th) analysis of John Redmond, I feel he is rather unfair…
COBH: LOCALS IN Cobh, Co Cork, placed 1,517 white roses in the sea yesterday in memory of the passengers and crew who perished…
EXPLORER'S VIEW: THE TITANIC would never survive being raised from the ocean bed, but more people should be able to visit her…
THE MOOD turned solemn in Belfast at the weekend as the city remembered the human cost of the Titanic sinking.
A minute's silence was held today as a memorial was opened in Belfast marking the centenary of the sinking of the Titanic.
MURIEL MARTIN and her daughter Lorna are on holidays from Australia retracing the route of the Titanic from Belfast to Southampton…
One hundred years ago this weekend, ‘Titanic’ sank after being struck by an iceberg
THE WRAPS came off a Co Mayo community’s most closely guarded secret yesterday when a 76ft model of the Titanic was launched …
OPINION: ON APRIL 11th, 1912 – 100 years ago – the Third Home Rule Bill was presented, for the first time, to the House of Commons…
CROBHINGNE: NÍOR CHUIR mé suim rómhór riamh sna scannáin a bhain leis an Titanic mar bhí a fhios agam cén chríoch a bhí leo…
Sir, – Your Editorial (April 7th) claims a steerage Titanic baby, the late Millvina Dean, was “the pet of the liner during the…
THE DECISIVE impact of the third Home Rule Bill on the history of Ireland over the past century was the theme of the first official…
Sir, – Your Editorial (“Redmond’s moment”, April 11th) asks us to remember the “massive, excited demonstrations” at which Irish…
ONE HUNDRED years to the day when 123 people boarded the Titanic at Cobh, the ship’s last port of call, President Michael D Higgins…
IT WAS a quid pro quo, driven by pragmatic political arithmetic rather than ideology or principle, but all the more remarkable…
ADVERSE WEATHER conditions delayed the arrival of the Titanic Memorial Cruise to Cobh yesterday with the liner not docking in…
A MAYO community that lost the cream of its youth in the Titanic tragedy brought their departure from the village vividly back…
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices