Tumgik
#irishmen
Text
Tumblr media
Patrick Byrne - Witchcraft in Ireland - The Mercier Press - 1979
36 notes · View notes
hombresexual2 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Esa copa en mi boca
73 notes · View notes
jziqadhrjyh · 1 year
Text
Ebony babe big ass fucked Atragantadola de verga a tetona Sex young boy and free all male gays porn Aiden looks fine skewered Noemie Bilas beautiful black ass fucked deep Beautiful busty girl stripped chat in front of cam Miss K sons young school friend virgin College students gang bang Deep Throat Challenge Dwarf fucking teen babe brunette Mais uma hotwife gostosa sentiu o tamanho e a grossura do meu pau Virgin teen
0 notes
Photo
Tumblr media
The Opium Ship by H. Bedford-Jones Smugglers and #pirates in the South China Sea as well as a ship full of #opium. Against them stand two #Irishmen. www.pulpfictionbook.store https://www.instagram.com/p/CkeqEsCrft5/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
0 notes
werewolfetone · 1 year
Text
It's so funny to me when people post about how "the horrors" is their favourite Tumblr Phrase™ that tumblr came up with. they don't know that that was one of father of Irish republicanism Theobald Wolfe Tone's favourite ways to describe his general situation from 1795 - 1798
693 notes · View notes
etoilesbienne · 1 year
Text
changing my stance english cc can only be added to the qsmp if theyre irish
329 notes · View notes
pyrepostings · 2 months
Text
imagining a defiant interrogation whumpee who gets sick of saying "I'm not telling you" so they start going into what sounds initially to be them finally telling whumper what they want to know, but ends up being whumpee wasting time by just quoting a song.
#pyreprompts#whump prompt#I have a scene or two for Kevin specifically#'Why have I taken up arms against you you ask? Well#I was walking down by island bridge#Just rambling about- going as I please#That day was warm and there was such a gentle breeze#It was the month of April I believe#I strolled up by the monument then laid down in the grass#Then I heard a soldiers voice behind me. It said#Meet me at the pillar son meet me there at noon. I need you brave young Irishmen there's something we must do...#He said his name was Padraig Pearce and he just kept on calling me'#Meet me at the pillar is such a good song even if extremely call to action#But that's just been my vibe so youknow#Doesn't even have to be an interrogation really#'So what's with the red hair and green eyes combo? Isn't that a little on the nose for a fenian?'#'Well first off- it has been incredibly difficult to hide while trying to cross boarders you're right#Secondly that's just kinda what happens when you have a county cork mother and an ulsterman father.#It's just a horrid color problem I've been left with- this orange and green.'#I imagine Kevin specifically would take it as a challenge to 1. See how obscure a rebel song he can pull up and#2. See how long it takes for the other guy to notice not a word he is saying is actually true or relevant#The exact scenes I'm imaging are in a au idk if I'll ever actually post publicly#But I might write them as him messing around with Zander#I still need to post something with Zander maybe this will be it
70 notes · View notes
essektheylyss · 10 months
Text
Wait, are people like... under the impression that Oppenheimer is somehow... a glorification of nuclear warfare? About the man who was so horrified by his involvement in the Manhattan Project and its results that he spent his life afterward lobbying against nuclear weapons development, the nuclear arms race and competition with the Soviets, and the development of the hydrogen bomb in particular, that he got blacklisted as a communist during the McCarthy years and was essentially erased from the scientific community because of it?
That Robert Oppenheimer?
67 notes · View notes
stairnaheireann · 5 months
Text
Kilmainham Gaol
Kilmainham Gaol is one of the largest unoccupied gaols in Europe, covering some of the most heroic and tragic events in Ireland’s emergence as a modern nation from the 1780s to the 1920s. Attractions include a major exhibition detailing the political and penal history of the prison and its restoration. Located approximately two miles outside of Dublin city centre, it was built as a county gaol to…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
27 notes · View notes
cowpokezuko · 12 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
New OCs; Maddalena Provenzano and Maeve O'Hara.
Romeo and Juliet if they were both from Staten Island
11 notes · View notes
twobrokenwyngs · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
barry keoghan | hot ones | 2.8.24
15 notes · View notes
acillianproblem · 4 months
Text
Bummed there’s no photos of Barry Keoghan and Cillian Murphy together at the Golden Globes 😩
15 notes · View notes
redlipredemption · 5 days
Text
wait so was nixon an irishman
8 notes · View notes
stelly38 · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Thank you, Ireland.  Why not celebrate with a curated collection of LILFs?  Sorry, Leprechauns I’d Like to F... worked better than IILFs (Irishmen I’d Like to...).  Happy Hot Irishmen day.  
48 notes · View notes
werewolfetone · 8 months
Note
Hi! So this is gonna sound weird, but I’ve kinda been learning about Irish history backwards? Like, I started with the Troubles (bc of family involvement), then back to the 1916 rising which got me more interested in the people involved which took me further back and etc etc. I know I’ve been doing it “wrong” but I’m just starting to come up to the 1798. Do you happen to have any recommended readings or particular persons of interest to read? Any collections of primary sources would be more than welcome!
Secondary sources I would recommend:
The Year of Liberty by Thomas Pakenham - about the rebellion in general
The People's Rising by Daniel Gahan - about the rebellion in Wexford
The Summer Soldiers by ATQ Stewart - about the rebellion in Ulster
Wolfe Tone: Prophet of Irish Independence by Marianne Elliott - about Wolfe Tone
The Life and Times of Mary Ann McCracken by Mary McNeill - technically this is just about Mary Ann but I think it's pretty good for Henry Joy McCracken too because there aren't many biographies of him
Orangeism in Ireland and Britain 1795 - 1836 by Hereward Senior - obviously exercise caution on whether or not you think you can mentally handle this subject but book about loyalism during 1798
Castlereagh: War, Enlightenment, and Tyranny by John Bew - about Lord Castlereagh
2 things that I would also recommend reading about for context are the French Revolution and the British radical movement of the late 18th century. for the French Revolution 1 book I would say is good is Liberty or Death by Peter McPhee and for the British radical movement... the book The English Jacobins by Carl B Cone does a good enough job
Primary sources:
The Memoirs of Theobald Wolfe Tone by Theobald Wolfe Tone - title is pretty self explanatory. It's Tone's account of his own life + his diary
The United Irishmen, Their Lives and Times by RR Madden - this is considered to be the 1st history of the rising & was written with the help of many people who lived through it, so it includes a lot of first hand accounts. HOWEVER. beware that Madden was your archetypical mid 19th century Catholic Irish nationalist and the bias created due to that shows through in every single part of these books
Memoirs of the different Rebellions in Ireland by Sir Richard Musgrave - this is another very early history of the rising, also written with the help of people who lived through, also including a lot of first hand accounts. HOWEVER. Musgrave is like Madden's Orange counterpart in that this book is also wildly biased and should also be read with a degree of caution
Personal Narrative of the "Irish Rebellion" of 1798, Sequel to Personal Narrative of the "Irish Rebellion" of 1798, and History and Consequences of the Battle of the Diamond by Charles Hamilton Teeling - 3 accounts of politics in Ireland in the 1790s written by someone who as a young man led the Catholic paramilitary the Defenders
The Drennan letters (a collection of letters that Belfast doctor William Drennan and his sister, Martha McTier, wrote to each other between the 1770s and 1820s), if you can find them, are another great primary source on both the United Irishmen & on what life was like back then in general, as are the McCracken letters, which I know are available free online somewhere I just can't remember where exactly I got the pdf from
There are a lot of them but if you're interested in primary sources you might also read some of the political pamphlets/books that were going around back then -- the most famous that come to mind in this context are Wolfe Tone's Argument on Behalf of the Catholics in Ireland, Thomas Paine's The Rights of Man, and Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France but there are wayyy more than that and at least some of them are on the internet archive
194 notes · View notes