Dave Mac hosts a series of podcasts looking at different aspects of Cork’s rich history with a particular focus on the many significant events of 1920: the assassination of Lord Mayor Tomás MacCurtain in March, the death by hunger strike of Lord Mayor Terence MacSwiney in October and the Burning of Cork in December. Dave will be joined by various guest experts to delve deep into these stories that have made Cork the place it is today.
https://redfm.ie/shows/dave-macs-cork-history-matters
Latest episodes
John Creedon on An Irish Folklore Treasury and his interest in placenames, history, language and lore.
2 years ago -
40 mins
Cork History Matters
Author Jim O’Neill on The Nine Years War Part 2 – From The Battle of Kinsale 1601 to The Flight of the Earls 1607
2 years ago -
73 mins
Cork History Matters
Author Jim O’Neill on The Nine Years War Part 1 – Up To The Battle of Kinsale 1601
2 years ago -
81 mins
Cork History Matters
Faeries, Felons and Fine Gentlemen: A History of the Glen, Cork 1700-1980
2 years ago -
67 mins
Cork History Matters
Cork History Matters- Elvera Butler Downtown Kampus 1977 - 1981
2 years ago -
60 mins
Cork History Matters
Colum Kenny author of A Bitter War discusses the Irish Civil War 1922-23
2 years ago -
45 mins
Cork History Matters
UCC historian Gabriel Doherty discusses Cork University Press publication The Art & Ideology of Terence MacSwiney
Lord Mayor of Cork and Commandant of the Cork no 1 Brigade of the IRA, Terence MacSwiney is most famous as the central figure in one of the great hunger strikes in world history, which culminated in his death in October 1920, aged 41, in Brixton prison, London, after a fast of 74 days. For many years prior to his demise, however, he had been an active participant in the intense cultural and political debates that characterised Irish life in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In these exchanges MacSwiney employed a variety of literary forms to express his support for the political separation of Ireland from Britain and the promotion of indigenous culture. These writings, regrettably, were overshadowed by the manner of his death, and for the most part have been unavailable to the public ever since. The volume seeks to re-awaken interest in this aspect of MacSwiney’s contribution to Irish life by making these texts available in a single volume for the first time. They cover the span of his adult life, from 1900 onwards: firstly as a published poet; subsequently as a dramatist, and finally as a prose writer. While his work as a member of Dáil Éireann, meant that he had much less time to devote to his writings in the last eighteen months of his life, the last texts included here date from shortly before the arrest and imprisonment that provoked his hunger strike.Authors are Gabriel Doherty, Fiona Brennan and Neil Buttimer.