Academic literature on the topic 'Historic sites – Ireland – Guidebooks'

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Journal articles on the topic "Historic sites – Ireland – Guidebooks"

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RAYNER, MATT J., KAREN A. BAIRD, JEREMY BIRD, et al. "Land and sea-based observations and first satellite tracking results support a New Ireland breeding site for the Critically Endangered Beck’s Petrel Pseudobulweria beckii." Bird Conservation International 30, no. 1 (2019): 58–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0959270919000145.

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SummaryThe Beck’s Petrel Pseudobulweria beckii is a ‘Critically Endangered’ seabird whose breeding sites remain unknown. Historic observations suggest the species’ distribution is concentrated in the Bismarck Archipelago and particularly southern New Ireland. Over the course of two research expeditions in 2016 and 2017 we used on-land and at-sea observations, local interviews and satellite telemetry to understand the distribution of the species, its at-sea movements and potential breeding locations. Land-based and at-sea observations indicated that the area of Silur Bay in southern New Ireland
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Lucas, Leopold. "The ordinary – extraordinary dialectics in tourist metropolises." International Journal of Tourism Cities 5, no. 1 (2019): 17–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijtc-12-2017-0082.

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PurposeStarting from the hypothesis of an ordinary/extraordinary tension that drives the link between tourist places and non-tourist places, this paper discusses the issue of tourist spatial delimitations. Rather than take such an issue for granted, the paper argues that the author needs to understand how the different actors within the tourism system create specific delimitations and how tourists deal with these delimitations. To pinpoint these tourist spatial delimitations, this paper considers three types of discourses: the discourse of local promoters, the discourse of guidebooks and the d
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Hillam, J., C. M. Groves, D. M. Brown, M. G. L. Baillie, J. M. Coles, and B. J. Coles. "Dendrochronology of the English Neolithic." Antiquity 64, no. 243 (1990): 210–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00077826.

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In the period 1970–85, tree-ring research in Europe had resulted in the production of long oak chronologies for both Ireland and Germany going back over 7000 years (e.g. Brown et al. 1986; Leuschner & Delorme 1984). In England, there was a network of regional chronologies covering the historic period, and almost no chronological coverage for the prehistoric. For the archaeologist this meant that, provided a site from the historic period produced a replicated site chronology, the chances of dating by dendrochronology were very high. The chances of this happening for a prehistoric site were
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Allen, Victoria, Joe Duffy, and Garret Scally. "Cilliní: (Re)addressing the past in the present." Scene 8, no. 1-2 (2020): 175–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/scene_00031_1.

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This article examines the ‘Cilliní’ project’s interdisciplinary approach of research and filmmaking practice to explore the phenomena of cilliní. The project has created artwork that investigates and visualizes landscapes and provides a spatial narrative on the subject of cilliní, which were historic sites in Ireland used for the burial of ‘unfortunates’, principally stillborn and unbaptized infants. The article draws on the material created and experiences involved in making the short film The Lament and creating a virtual reality installation, Cilliní Tales, which, respectively, employ the t
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Pilkevych, Viktoriia. "Cultural and Natural Sites of Europe According to UNESCO List of World Heritage in Danger." European Historical Studies, no. 12 (2019): 125–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2524-048x.2019.12.125-135.

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The author studies UNESCO’s activities in the cultural sphere, especially the protection and preservation of cultural heritage around the world. There is World Heritage List. Sites must be of outstanding universal value and meet the special criteria to be included on this List. Countries are trying to include their cultural objects for protection. Cultural heritage is architectural works, works of monumental sculpture and painting, elements or structures of an archaeological nature groups of buildings which are of outstanding universal value. The World Heritage Committee is responsible for the
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Timberlake, Simon. "Prehistoric Copper Extraction in Britain: Ecton Hill, Staffordshire." Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 80 (December 23, 2013): 159–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ppr.2013.17.

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Major investigations were undertaken of the Ecton Copper Mines, Staffordshire, following the discovery of hammerstones and a red deer antler tool dating to the Early Bronze Age during surface and underground exploration in the 1990s. Ecton Hill was surveyed, the distribution of hammerstone tools examined, and two identified sites of potential prehistoric mining close to the summit of the hill excavated in 2008 & 2009. Excavations at Stone Quarry Mine revealed noin situprehistoric mining activity, but hammerstones and Early Bronze Age bone mining tools from upcast suggest that an historic m
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Frausing, Mikael. "Et lykkeligt fornuftsægteskab? Turistforeningen for Danmark mellem hjemstavnsturisme og eksportturisme ca. 1888-1967." Kulturstudier 1, no. 1 (2010): 24. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/ks.v1i1.3882.

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Artiklen baserer sig på undersøgelser af Turistforeningen for Danmarks virke med hovedvægt på perioden 1923-1945. Nedsættelsen af „Udenrigsministeriets Udvalg for Turistpropaganda i Udlandet" i 1934 betød en gennemgribende forandring, hvor staten for første gang involverede sig aktivt i Turistforeningens organisation<br />og arbejde. Turisme blev herved i højere grad opfattet som et eksporterhverv og indrettet efter sit økonomiske indtjeningspotentiale. Hermed lagdes grunden til den o
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Hummler, Madeleine. "Britain - Kitty Hauser. Shadow Sites: Photography, Archaeology, & the British Landscape 1927–1955. xii+314 pages, 120 illustrations. 2007. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 978-0-19-920632-2 hardback. - Richard Muir. Be Your Own Landscape Detective: Investigating Where You Are. xii+308 pages, numerous illustrations. 2007. Stroud: Sutton; 978-0-7509-4333-8 hardback £20; 978-0-7509-4334-5 paperback. - Hadrian Cook & Tom Williamson (ed.). Water Meadows: History, EcologyandConservation. viii+152 pages, 49 b&w & colour illustrations, 9 tables. 2007. Bollington: Windgather; 978-1-905119-12-7 paperback. - Garth Weston. Monuments and Mountains: Stone Circles, Henges and Standing Stones in the Landscape. viii+232 pages, 38 b&w & colour illustrations, 2 tables. 2007. Bakewell: Country Books/Ashbridge; 978-1-901214-79-6 paperback £19.99. - A.L. Brindley The Dating of Food Vessels & Urns in Ireland (Bronze Age Studies 7). vii+392 pages, 164 illustrations, 75 tables. 2007. Galway: Department of Archaeology, National University of Ireland; 9535620-2-6 hardback €40+€7 postage. - David Petts with Christopher Gerrard. Shared Visions: The North-East Regional Research Framework forthe Historic Environment. vi+278 pages, 99 b&w & colour illustrations. 2006. Durham: Durham County Council; 978-1-897585-86-3 paperback £25. - Peter Davenport, Cynthia Poole & David Jordan. Archaeology in Bath. Excavations at the New RoyalBaths (the Spa), and Bellott’s Hospital 1998–1999. (Oxford Archaeology Monograph 3). xiv+182 pages, 75 illustrations, 32 tables. 2007. Oxford: Oxford Archaeology; 978-0-904220-45-2 paperback £9.99. - Simon Young. Farewell Britannia: A Family Saga of Roman Britain. xiv+286 pages, 6 illustrations. 2007. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson; 978-0-297-85226-1 hardback £16.99. - Alan Crossley, Tom Hassall & Peter Sawley (ed.). William Morris’s Kelmscott: Landscape and History. xiv+210 pages, 114 b&w & colour illustrations. 2007. Bollington: Windgather; 978-1-905119-14-1 paperback." Antiquity 81, no. 313 (2007): 826. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00120678.

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McCormick, Fergus, and Melissa Nicolas. "Impacts of climate change on coastal archaeological sites in County Kerry, Ireland." Internet Archaeology, no. 60 (May 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.11141/ia.60.2.

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This paper deals with the effects of climate change on coastal heritage sites located on the south west coast of Ireland. The three case studies discussed below are National Monument sites in State care. The Office of Public Works (OPW) is responsible for their day-to-day maintenance and conservation. The sites used as case studies are Dunbeg Promontory Fort, Skellig Michael and Ballinskelligs Priory. Climate change has been affecting these sites and causing damage to their historic fabric. The OPW has taken mitigating measures to reduce the impact of climate change on these sites and protect
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Forsythe, Wes, Rosemary McConkey, and Colin Breen. "Coastal Saltworks and Atlantic Opportunities at Two Early Modern Sites on the North Coast of Ireland." European Journal of Archaeology, July 24, 2025, 1–20. https://doi.org/10.1017/eaa.2025.10011.

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The extraction of salt from seawater is one of the most direct ways of exploiting the marine environment. In the historic period, the production of salt formed an important component of the global economy. In temperate locations such as Ireland, archaeological evidence of extracting salt from seawater comprises a range of expressions and locations dictated by the energy resource required. This article presents the results of the first archaeological excavations of a saltworks complex in Ireland, at two sites that produced salt from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries. Partial excavatio
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Historic sites – Ireland – Guidebooks"

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Cagle, Amanda. "Sacred sites and the modern national identity of Ireland /." Read thesis online, 2007. http://library.uco.edu/UCOthesis/CagleA2007.pdf.

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Books on the topic "Historic sites – Ireland – Guidebooks"

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Peter, Harbison, ed. Guide to national and historic monuments of Ireland: Including a selection of other monuments not in State care. 3rd ed. Gill and Macmillan, 1992.

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Aviva, Elyn. Powerful places in Ireland. Pilgrims Process, 2011.

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Aviva, Elyn. Powerful places in Ireland. Pilgrims Process, 2011.

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Hudson, Kenneth. The Cambridge guide to the historic places of Britain and Ireland. Cambridge University Press, 1989.

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Peter, Somerville-Large, ed. Legendary Ireland. Roberts Rinehart Publishers, 1995.

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Trust, National. 2007. National Trust, 2006.

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John, Cowell. Dublin's famous people and where they lived. O'Brien Press, 1996.

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Connell, Joseph E. A. Dublin in rebellion: A directory, 1913-1923. Lilliput, 2009.

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A, Connell Joseph E., ed. Dublin in rebellion: A directory, 1913-1923. Lilliput, 2009.

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Trust, National. The National Trust handbook: For members and visitors. National Trust, 1997.

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Book chapters on the topic "Historic sites – Ireland – Guidebooks"

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Hanna, Erika. "Dark Rooms and Developing Fluid." In Snapshot Stories. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198823032.003.0004.

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Chapter 3 explores the practices of photography clubs. Throughout Ireland, during the twentieth century, men and women spent their evenings in the dark rooms of photography clubs, and their weekends on days out to historic sites and beauty spots organized by these groups. As such, these organizations played an important role in mediating ideas of photographic value, technical perfection, and the picturesque. This chapter explores their history, and uses the way photography was taught to explore the relationship between photographic aesthetics and how society and people were envisioned through
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FitzPatrick, Elizabeth. "Dwellings of Literati." In Landscapes of the Learned. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192855749.003.0004.

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Abstract The domestic and guesting environment of learned kindreds is explored in this chapter through case studies of enclosed settlements of caisel, crannóg and pailís type, a promontory fort, and tower-houses. The findings reveal variety, intention, continuity and change in the dwellings of literati, particularly among those they chose to build or to modify for themselves. In manipulating earlier settlement enclosures as their domestic space, learned kindreds contributed to architectural innovation in late medieval Ireland. Remodeling of the caisel of Cahermacnaghten, by brehon lawyers in t
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Conference papers on the topic "Historic sites – Ireland – Guidebooks"

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Dey, B., Richard Connelly, Krzysztof Czajewski, et al. "The remediation and closure of the former Garryard and Gortmore sites within the historic Silvermines district Ireland." In Eighth International Seminar on Mine Closure. Australian Centre for Geomechanics, Cornwall, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.36487/acg_rep/1352_26_dey.

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