Browsing History (Conference proceedings) by Issue Date
Now showing items 1-19 of 19
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Dating Irish grave slabs: The evidence of the annals
(The Stationery Office, 1995) -
Irish monumental sculpture: The dating evidence provided by linguistic forms
(Oxbow Books, 2001) -
Celts, Romans and the Coligny calendar
(Oxbow Books, 2002) -
Scultptors and their customers: A study of Clonmacnoise grave-slabs
(The Stationery Office, 2003) -
The gods of Newgrange in Irish literature & Romano-Celtic tradition
(Archaeopress, 2003)This paper examines the proposition put forward by Professor M.J. and Claire O'Kelly that medieval Irish literature provides us with evidence of gods who may have been worshipped by those woho built Neolithic Newgrange. ... -
Royal fleets in Viking Ireland: the evidence of Lebor na Cert, A.D. 1050-1150
(Maney Publishing, 2004) -
Surname formation in Ireland: Discussion, debates and DNA
(SNSBI [Society for Name Studies in Britain and Ireland], 2013) -
Blood of the Dubliners
(Dublin City Library, 2013) -
The unique nature of Dál Cais DNA
(Trinity College Dublin, 2014) -
Surname research and DNA: Publications, possibilities and pitfalls
(Dublin City Library, 2015) -
Paddy le Carpenter and surname formation in the mid-west
(UCD [University College Dublin], 2015) -
What is an Irish clan?
(GGI [Genetic Genealogy Ireland], 2015) -
Killaloe – royal and ecclesiastical power on the merchants’ river
(UCD [University College Dublin], 2015) -
Early genealogies of West Clare
(Kilrush and District Historical Society, 2015) -
The descendants of Brian Boru
(GGI [Genetic Genealogy Ireland], 2015) -
Bonfields, Brodericks, Griffins, O'Gradys, Whites and Walls: Genetic genealogies and DNA studies in Limerick
(Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick, 2015) -
The multilingual origins of medieval Irish surnames
(ISOGG [International society of Genetic Genealogy], 2015) -
Brotherly love and ancestral veneration in early Ireland
(JPI on Culturale Heritage, 2016) -
Migrancy in Medieval Ireland: Merchants, monks, miscreants and mercenaries
(UCC [University College Cork], 2018)