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In the Royal Irish Academy's educational resources series , Ruth McManus (Dublin City University) discusses how the printed Irish Historic Towns Atlas and IHTA Online can be used in third-level geography.
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For the first time in three years, the Irish Historic Towns Atlas (IHTA) were part of a number of in-person and online events for Heritage Week 2022.
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A chronological listing by publication date of all available Irish Historic Towns Atlas online editions.
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Irish Historic Towns Atlas no. 17 Belfast, part II, 1840 to 1900 by Stephen A. Royle was originally published in 2007.
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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.
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Irish Historic Towns Atlas no. 28 Galway/Gaillimh by Jacinta Prunty and Paul Walsh, published by the Royal Irish Academy in 2016, is now available to browse and download for free as part of IHTA Online.
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If you missed our first Research Open Day, you can watch it back now
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Published and forthcoming atlases and ancillary publications to date.
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Dublin , part I to 1610 by H.B. Clarke and Limerick by Eamon O'Flaherty are now freely available as part of IHTA Online from today.
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Links to other projects and other online resources.
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As part of the IHTA Town Type series, Colm Lennon, MRIA and editor of the Irish Historic Towns Atlas Suburbs Series, writes about the Town in the Eighteenth Century when many significantly expanded.
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Irish Historic Towns Atlas no. 15 Derry~Londonderry by Avril Thomas was originally published in 2005.
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The collaboration between the Irish Historic Towns Atlas (IHTA) and the Heritage Council was celebrated this week with the launch of the IHTA Layer on HeritageMaps.ie and the Digital Atlas of Fethard as well as participating in the Dublin Festival of History
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In the Royal Irish Academy's educational resources series , Rachel Murphy (University of Limerick) discusses how GIS and the IHTA can be used in third-level history.
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Irish Historic Towns Atlas no. 1 Kildare by J.H. Andrews was originally published in 1986.
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The City of Derry was ‘UK City of Culture’ in 2013. To mark this the Irish Historic Towns Atlas, Royal Irish Academy have collaborated with Derry City Council and the School of Geography,
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Ruth McManus and Jonathan Wright have been appointed to the Board of the Irish Historic Towns Atlas as honorary editors.
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Further resources for researchers, students and teachers.
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Irish Historic Towns Atlas no. 2 Carrickfergus by Philip Robinson was originally published in 1986.
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In the sixth and final IHTA Town Type Essay, Jacinta Prunty, Irish Historic Towns Atlas editor and Maynooth University lecturer, discusses the changes in and to towns in the nineteenth century.
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Town & Country: perspectives from the Irish Historic Towns Atlas was launched by Vanessa Harding, chair, Historic Towns Trust last night following a lecture by Howard Clarke 'Mapping places, mapping people: Dublin and Dubliners' perspectives'
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This year we welcomed 1467 visitors through the doors and we had plenty for them to see and hear.
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Irish Historic Towns Atlas no. 22 Longford by Sarah Gearty, Martin Morris and Fergus O'Ferrall was originally published in 2010.
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Irish Historic Towns Atlas honorary editor, contributor, colleague and friend moves to South Sudan to take on a new challenge.
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Maynooth University history student, Kevin Comiskey, gives an account of his six weeks as a SPUR student in the Irish Historic Towns Atlas project.
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