-
In this episode, Katie Liston, Joseph Maguire and Bruce Kidd explore the role of sports in crafting identities and shaping politics on the island of Ireland.
-
In this episode Tobias Lock and Aoife O’Donoghue discuss the lessons learned from German Unification and how we might best apply them.
-
Forgotten heroes, unforgettable failures, the tragic, talented lives cut short – would they feel disappointed to be lost to the archives or do they think they expected to end up there at all? Fiona Murphy of Books Ireland talks to the Dictionary of Irish Biography...
-
William Orpen’s The Signing of Peace, Versailles, 1919
-
New book reveals how Trinity students, staff and alumni experienced the tumultuous period of 1912-1923 which transformed Dublin, Ireland, and the wider world.
-
Ár Ré Dhearóil, by Máirtín Ó Direáin
-
President Higgins to issue posthumous pardon to man wrongfully executed in 1882
-
Spot us on the citywide banners during Seachtain na Gaeilge
-
The latest volume in the New Survey of Clare Island series has just gone to print. Pre-order your copy ahead of its release in August.
-
A word dear to Seamus Heaney, how does 'dulse' feature in medieval Irish law, literature and medicine?
-
Learn about the Irish phrase ' crith talún' in today's episode of Spreading the Words.
-
In today's ARINS blog, Professor Colin Harvey picks through the political uncertainties surrounding the anticipated referendums, north and south, and asks how will the referendums work?
-
In this bonus episode of Shelfmarks guest writer Conor W. O'Brien tells us about the wolf in Ireland.
-
Read Aidan Beatty's essay on 'The Politics of Masculinity' on Century Ireland.
-
Read Joanna Bruck and Damian Sheils' essay on Landscapes of counter-memory on Century Ireland.
-
Profs. Kathryn McNeilly, and Aoife O’Donoghue from Queens University Belfast’s School of Law share their research examining legal equivalence in Human Rights law in Ireland and Northern Ireland with our host Rory Montgomery.
-
Art and Architecture of Ireland reviewed in the Irish Independent.
-
Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy is a peer-reviewed journal which publishes original research papers primarily in the fields of archaeology and history, but also welcomes submissions on aspects of culture, including material culture, from the perspectives of other disciplines, as...
-
16 panels depicting Rising leaders who had train stations named after them in 1966 were unveiled on 25 February in Pearse Station.
-
As one of DRI’s core consortium organisations, the RIA has been closely involved with DRI’s development since 2011 and collections from the Academy Library and Publications departments have been deposited in the Repository over the last number of years.
-
The pictorical map, subject of Renaissance Galway: delineating the seventeenth-century city by Paul Walsh was the subject of a seminar dedicated to the map and celebrated at the launch by Cllr Denis Lyons, Deputy Mayor of Galway in Galway City Museum on Thursday 10 October 2019.
-
The Royal Irish Academy has created a pop-up exhibition based on the book A history of Ireland in 100 words to inspire fresh interest in the Irish language by revealing connections between words we still use and words used in a bygone era.
-
On Day 5 of Heritage Week we introduce a migrant bird breeding only at two locations on Clare Island, featuring in New Survey of Clare Island, vol. 9: Birds .
-
Join RIA authors William C. Campbell and Claire O'Connell on 12 November on RTÉ One.
THE ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY IS IRELAND'S LEADING BODY OF EXPERTS IN THE SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES
The Royal Irish Academy/Acadamh Ríoga na hÉireann champions research. We identify and recognise Ireland’s world class researchers. We support scholarship and promote awareness of how science and the humanities enrich our lives and benefit society. We believe that good research needs to be promoted, sustained and communicated. The Academy is run by a Council of its members. Membership is by election and considered the highest academic honour in Ireland.
Read more about the RIA