Queen for a day – Anne Boylan on Strumpet City and Peter Ustinov
An Irishwoman’s Diary
An Irishwoman’s Diary
Mapping the history of that most Irish of newspaper genres – the Sunday paper
From The Back Pages: Scenes of violence marred the opening of Shelbourne Park
Hugh Lane’s contribution to cultural history is the focus of Thaddeus O’Sullivan’s new film
The Irish labour movement’s leading role in the campaign proved a pyrrhic victory, creating internal tensions within trade unions and drawing hostility from their British counterparts
INM pensions scandal shows there is no unacceptable face of Irish capitalism
Unions protest over unilateral plan to reduce pensions by another 30% as company meets
Opposition criticises Government’s approach to secondary school teachers’ strike
Landmark has survived despite criticism by WB Yeats and the scourge of ‘love locks’
Jack B Yeats and Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington among those who sought monetary relief
The coverage of the Rising in Irish newspapers was largelyshaped by their ideological positions on Irish nationalism
Tuite brought on board to enhance residential side of business
Former veterinary college site in Ballsbridge among more high-profile developments
The Hollywood star is selling her scenic coastal property, Lugdine Park, which is set on 35 acres.
Adapting the 127-year-old grand dame of booksellers to the world of modern retailing is a big challenge, admits Conor Whelan
Project on 1913 Lockout cartoons wins ‘Threesis’ time-trial contest
The Abbey Theatre’s adaptation of James Plunkett’s 1958 play ‘The Risen People’ takes in elements of music hall and vaudeville, and discards Jim Larkin
Opinion: Capitalist outlook espoused by 1913 Lockout victor became fundamental to the character of the independent Irish state
Opinion: Events of the year concerned not just class struggle but the right to citizenship
There have been changes since 1913, but some are still more equal than others . . .
Cartoon sketches satirised both James Larkin and William Martin Murphy
It’s 100 years since Yeats’s ‘September 1913’ was published in ‘The Irish Times’. Queer bedfellows they may be, but poems and papers have had a storied partnership
At twenty to ten on the morning of Tuesday 26th August, 1913, the trams stopped running.
Murphy – often cast as the villain of the 1913 Lockout – is remembered more fondly in a Dublin golf club and his native west Cork
Descendants of William Martin Murphy defend his record at west Cork gathering
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