Print preview Close

Showing 6885 results

Archivistische beschrijving
Irish Capuchin Archives Irish Capuchin Archives
Print preview Hierarchy View:

3419 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Galway’s New Cathedral

Prints, transparencies and negatives used to illustrate an article by Bertie Donohoe titled ‘Galway’s New Cathedral’, published in 'The Capuchin Annual' (1966), pp 399-407. One of the prints shows Éamon de Valera, President of Ireland, arriving for the formal blessing and opening. The Cathedral of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St. Nicholas, Galway, was opened in August 1965.

Irish Language Notes

Draft notes compiled by Fr. Richard Henebry on Irish language texts. The notes are signed ‘Risteard de Hindeberg’ and include a reference to the year 1913.

Notes on Fr. Richard Henebry’s Life

Research notes compiled by Fr. Senan Moynihan OFM Cap. re the life of Fr. Richard Henebry. The file includes two small notebooks containing headings for a biographical treatment of Henebry’s life. One of the manuscripts is titled ‘Brogue’ and refers to ‘Celtic scholarship’ and the ‘dialect of English spoken in Ireland, or Anglo-Irish is usually called the “brogue”. The text is signed by Fr. Senan and is dated 21 Sept. 1924.

Presbyterian Church and Bridge, Portlaw, County Waterford

A postcard print captioned 'Presbyterian Church & the Bridge, Portlaw, County Waterford'. The church dates to about 1845. The two-storey building adjacent to the church is the manse (a name given to a house inhabited by a minister, typically from the Presbyterian, Methodist or other Reformed Protestant religions). The manse in Portlaw was occupied by the Reverend David Ferguson, Presbyterian minister in Portlaw, from about 1843 to 1887. The Presbyterian church in Portlaw was closed in 1931.

The Collecting of Irish Music by Fr. Richard Henebry

A clipping of an article by Fr. Richard Henebry titled ‘The Collecting of Irish music’ (‘Waterford News’, 11 May 1914). The article refers to Henebry's work on the preservation of traditional Irish tunes and to the need to establish an 'Phonogram Archive of Irish music' in University College Cork.

Letter from Fr. Mícheál Ó Flannagáin

Letter from Fr. Mícheál Ó Flannagáin, The Gaelic League, 149 Broadway, New York, to Fr. Richard Henebry. Flannagáin refers to Hudson Maxim (1853-1927), an American military inventor and author.

Resultaten 831 tot 840 van 6885