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Author Archives: Ian Adamson
The Academic Suppression of the native British or Pretani, the People of the Cruthin : Part : Part 8 – Institute for the Study of Conflict Transformation and Social Justice (ISCTSJ) Queen’s University, Belfast
Queen’s University, Belfast has recently made a significant investment in what it claims is its long-established expertise in conflict and peace processes by founding a dedicated Institute for the Study of Conflict Transformation and Social Justice. At the heart of this … Continue reading
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The Academic Suppression of the native British or Pretani, the People of the Cruthin : Part 7 – The Myths of Peter Shirlow
Peter Shirlow was a Professor in the School of Law at the Queen’s University of Belfast, then Professor of Conflict Transformation there and a key member of the Institute for the Study of Conflict Transformation and Social Justice (ISCTSJ), which is linked to … Continue reading
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The Academic Suppression of the native British or Pretani, the People of the Cruthin : Part 6 – The Gaelic Colonisation
The Tartessian language is the extinct Paleohispanic language of inscriptions in the Southwestern script found in the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula mainly in the south of Portugal ( Algarve and southern Alentejo), but also in Spain (south of Extramadura … Continue reading
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The Academic Suppression of the native British or Pretani, the People of the Cruthin : Part 5 – The Donegal Kingdoms
Ptolemy’s Map oh the British Isles c150 AD The traditional understanding of the history of the Venniconian Kingdoms of Donegal maintained that at some time in the late fifth century the sons of Niall of the Nine hostages, Cairpre, Conaill, Enda and Eogan … Continue reading
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The Academic Suppression of the native British or Pretani, the People of the Cruthin : Part 4 – Dalriada and the Cruthin
“The darkest places in hell are reserved for those who maintain their neutrality in times of moral crisis” – Inferno: The Divine Comedy – Dante Alighieri Ptolemy’s Map of the British Isles c150 AD. A wonderfully arcane and self-contradictory article has appeared … Continue reading
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The Academic Suppression of the native British or Pretani, the People of the Cruthin : Part 3
While the prominent part played by Ireland’s pre-Celtic inhabitants within our historical and cultural heritage is slowly being acknowledged (or re-asserted), in some quarters such an admission is a non-starter. A well-known television presenter, appearing on the BBC (Northern Ireland) … Continue reading
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The Academic Suppression of the native British or Pretani, the People of the Cruthin : Part 2
In 1932 the Minister for Industry and Commerce of the Irish Free State (Saorstát Eireann) commissioned an Official Handbook in which Eoin MacNeill wrote:”While the Celts were still newcomers to Ireland and Britain, the inhabitants of both countries were known … Continue reading
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The Academic Suppression of the native British or Pretani, the People of the Cruthin : Part 1
When I first began to write books on Ulster history in the late 1960s, it was in an attempt to fill the obvious vacuum which existed in general public awareness concerning the real roots of the people of Northern Ireland. … Continue reading
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Arise, Sir Van, the Pride of Belfast
Sir Van Morrison described himself as just a “blue-eyed soul singer” from Belfast as he was knighted for a musical career that has enthralled audiences and delighted critics. Over more than 50 years the singer has gone from teenage stardom … Continue reading
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Motorsport Legends Rally For Columbanus
Eddie Irvine Alastair Seeley Jeremy Mc Williams Two worlds – ancient and modern – collided today, Sunday 22nd November, 2015, when St Columbanus, the Patron Saint Of Bikers, was celebrated at Eddie Irvine Sports, Balloo Road, Bangor. F1 legend Eddie … Continue reading
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