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How To Submit Bibliographic Information to IHO
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An exhibition on ‘Mapping city, town and country since 1824: the Ordnance Survey in Ireland’ was on view in the Royal Irish Academy Library (1 July 2014– 30 January 2015). Organised by the Library and the Irish Historic Towns Atlas (IHTA), the exhibition focused on the Academy’s...
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Please complete the below to register for the 2019 Charlemont Grants and to receive an application form. Each application form is registered with a unique ID submission link. Please retain the important information contained in the registration email.
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The Royal Irish Academy is happy to once more open the annual Archaeology Research Grants Scheme in partnership with the National Monuments Service (Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage), and the Historic Environment Division (Department for Communities, NI) which enables this...
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William Rowan Hamilton’s 'Eureka moment' resulted in a new system of four-dimensional numbers which he called ‘quaternions’. But what use are they?
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Lunchtime Lecture to accompany the Polish Embassy's exhibition on the life and career of Consul-General Wacław Tadeusz Dobrzyński.
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A collection of audio recordings of the Academy discourse series.
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The year 1922 in Ireland was pivotal; it witnessed three major events that ushered in the final phase of Ireland's revolution - the ratification of the Anglo Irish Treaty leading to the establishment of the Irish Free State, the final confirmation of partition when Northern Ireland opted out of...
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Citation on the awarding of the 2014 RIA Gold Medal in the Humanities to Desmond M. Clarke MRIA
Written on 27 January 2015
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The Academy’s Policy Oversight Group (POG) is tasked with advising upon the initiation and implementation of all the Academy’s policy activities. It works alongside the Academic Board in identifying strategic issues to be pursued, and monitors the impact of these initiatives. It is also...
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The Graves Collection is an amalgamation of three separate, but related, correspondence collections of three prominent Irish antiquarians; John O’Donovan, MRIA, 1806-61, Rev. James Graves, MRIA, 1815-86 and Rev. Charles Graves, MRIA, 1812-99.
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The main purpose of this 18 month post-doctoral Fellowship is to further develop the prosopographical database of British Settlers in the Ulster Plantation (1609-1700) which can be found here. The project uses historical data relating to the English and Scottish men and women who settled in the...
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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...
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Information on how to cite DIFP
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Irish Historic Towns Atlas, no. 24 Sligo by Fióna Gallagher and Marie-Louise Legg was originally published in 2012.
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See below for a list of staff from partner institutions who supported the Digital Arts and Humanities (DAH) Structured PhD programme.
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The Kevin B. Nowlan collection was donated to the Royal Irish Academy in 2013 and reflects the wide and varied interests which Nowlan held.
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No editorial corrections of personal names have been made, although the modern form of geographic locations has been utilised.
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Library Lunchtime Lecture series organised to accompany the exhibition 'Science at the Royal Irish Academy: ‘Uniting whatever is pleasing with whatever is useful’ (July 2012-May 2013.)
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The scheme aims to expand the range of digitised historical and archaeological sources available through open and free access to researchers, for private study or education purposes. Proposals can take two forms:
1) The digitisation of a historical or archaeological source or sources (...
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The Royal Irish Academy’s New Survey of Clare Island, a unique multidisciplinary endeavour that together with Robert Lloyd Praeger’s first Clare Island Survey provides an invaluable body of research informing future conservation of natural and built heritage of Ireland and Europe.
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