BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Moore Institute - ECPv6.0.0.1//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:Moore Institute
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Moore Institute
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Europe/Dublin
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0100
TZNAME:IST
DTSTART:20130331T010000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:+0100
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:GMT
DTSTART:20131027T010000
END:DAYLIGHT
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130913T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20130913T090000
DTSTAMP:20260417T025928
CREATED:20160824T134718Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160824T134718Z
UID:2325-1379062800-1379062800@mooreinstitute.ie
SUMMARY:Landlords\, tenants and their estates in Ireland:  1600-2013 - September 13th and 14th 2013
DESCRIPTION:Friday 13 September 2013 \n9.00-9.30 Registration and Welcome (Moore Seminar Room) \n9.30-11.00 Panel 1 \nPanel 1 (a) Transnational estate histories? \nChair: Dr. Enrico Dal Lago(Moore Seminar Room) \nWhat can Irish plantations in the French\, British and Danish Caribbean tell us about landed \nestates in Ireland? (Dr. Orla Power\, TCD) \nSecond Slavery\, Second Landlordism\, and Modernity: Nineteenth-Century Irish Landed \nEstates in Comparative Perspective (Cathal Smith\, NUI Galway) \nScottish and Irish estate histories\, c. 1800-c.1922: trans-regional\, trans-national\, trans- \nimperial?(Dr. Annie Tindley\, University of Dundee) \nPanel 1 (b) Social networks and the changing face of the gentry in Ireland \nChair: Dr. Jackie UÌ_Chionna(Optics Room) \nAn Ordered Society\, Social networking of the Power Elites 1850-1880: Case Study Thomas \nConolly and Castletown\, Co Kildare (Suzanne Pegley\, NUI Maynooth) \n‰Û÷Aggressive busybody’: Arthur Hugh Smith Barry (1843-1925) and the purpose of the Irish \ngentry(Dr. Ian d’Alton\, Independent scholar) \nFrom Soldiers To Scholars: The social metamorphosis of an Irish landed family (Michael \nMurphy\, NUI Maynooth) \n11.00-11.30 Tea and Coffee \n11.30-12.30 Plenary  \nChair: (TBC) \nNorthern perspectives: challenges\, opportunities and the Ulster landed \nEstate(Dr. Olwen Purdue\, QUB) (venue: TBC) \n12.30-1.30 Lunch \n1.30-3.00 Panel 2 \nPanel 2 (a) Agrarian and labour disturbances mid nineteenth century rural Ireland  \nChair: Dr. John Cunningham (Moore Seminar Room) \n‰Û÷The law of Captain Rock is more powerful’ (Terry Dunne\, NUI Maynooth) \nDistress and agitation in the west: labour unrest on the Mahon estate in 1831 (Dr. Adrian \nGrant\, NUI Galway) \nThe agrarian disturbances of 1849-1852; landlord/tenant conflict on the South Ulster \nborderlands (KerronO’Luain\, QUB) \nPanel 2 (b) Landed estate questions: management\, finance\, and legacy  \nChair: DrTomÌÁs Finn(Optics Room) \nPacifying the estate: the challenge of managing the Landed Estate (Laura Vickers\, NUI Galway) \nCapitalising on the Irish ‰Û÷Land Question’: Irish Land Bonds\, 1891-1938 \n(Nathan Foley-Fisher\, US Federal Reserve and Dr. Eoin McLaughlin\, University of Edinburgh) \nThe Big House: From private home to public space (Emer Crooke\, NUI Maynooth) \n3.00-3.30 Tea and Coffee \n3.30-5.00  Panel 3 \nPanel 3 (a) Archives and estates \nChair: Kieran Hoare (venue: TBC) \nAnalysing the big house network in Ulster: a brief enquiry (Bethany Sinclair\, PRONI) \nThe Quit Office Crown Estate papers as a source for the study of Nineteenth Century Irish \nhistory (Dr. Kevin Forkan\, NAI) \nTownlands.csv\, the core data of the Down Survey of Ireland project (David Brown\, TCD) \n5.15-6.15 Plenary \nChair: (TBC) \nFrom Bonfire to Sperm Whale: Interpreting Historic Houses Through \ntheir Archives (Professor Christopher Ridgway) (venue: TBC) \n6.30-7.30 Wine reception \nLaunch of ‰Û÷Irish Landed Estates Special Interest Group’ \n(Moore Seminar Room) \n8.30 Conference dinner for speakers \nSaturday 14 September 2013 \n9.30-11.00 Panel 4 \nPanel 4 (a) Religious divides and estate life during the 1700s and 1800s \nChair: (TBC) (Moore Seminar Room) \nEstates and their tenants: A case study of the Morristown Lattin and Castle Leslie estates in \nthe eighteenth century  (Dr. Emma Lyons\, UCD) \n‰Û÷I should have no objections to your having guns’ – The influence of Orange landlords over \ntheir tenant Orangemen in 1830s Ulster (Dr. Daragh Curran\, NUIM) \n‰Û÷Unless he be a Catholic and his name begin with O’\, he is to be denounced as an alien’: The \nO’Conor Don and Catholic Landlordism in Victorian Ireland (Dr. Aidan Enright\, Independent scholar) \nPanel 4 (b) Women and the landed estate \nChair: Dr. Sarah Anne Buckley (Optics Room) \nThe Marchioness of Ormond’s return from exile and the Butler Estate (Dr. John Jeremiah \nCronin\, Independent scholar) \n‰Û÷The Landlord Class is Slowly Bleeding to Death': Gender\, Philanthropy and Social \nConservatism in Victorian Ireland (Dr. Andrew G. Newby\, University of Helsinki)\nLady Godfrey's Mill' Ch̢telaines of a Kerry Estate(Dr. John Knightly\, Independent scholar)\n11.00-11.30  Tea and Coffee \n11.30-12.30  Plenary \nChair: Dr. Mary Harris \nThe Landed (E)state in the Nineteenth Century \n(Professor Ewen A. Cameron\, University of Edinburgh) (venue: TBC) \n12.30-1.30 Lunch \n1.30-3.00 Panel 5 \nPanel 5 (a) Disorder and a reordering of Ireland during the 1600s and 1700s \nChair: Dr. Padraig Lenihan (Moore Seminar Room) \nLandlords\, tenants and Cromwellians (Dr. John Cunningham\, TCD) \nTenant/ landlord relations during the 1641 Rebellion in King’s and Queen’s Counties \n(PÌÁdraigLawlor\, TCD) \nA New Order? Landowners\, middlemen and the fight for land in East Clare\, 1690-1740 \n(Teresa Shoosmith\, NUIGalway) \nPanel 5 (b) Paternalism\, power\, and pedagogy: landlords\, servants\, and tenants\,  \nChair: Dr. Andrew Newby (Optics Room) \nServants on Landed Estates in Eighteenth Century Ireland (Teri Brandon\, UCC) \nEducation\, paternalism and power on an Irish landed estate\, 1820-1870 (Dr. Kevin McKenna\, \nindependent scholar) \nLandlords and Libraries (Pamela Emerson\, University of Ulster) \n3.00-3.30 Tea and Coffee \n3.30-4.00  \nChair: (TBC) \nWilliam Sharman Crawford: the landlord as land reformer \n(Professor Peter Gray\, QUB) (venue: TBC) \nConference close \nFor more information on this conference please contact j.mcentee@live.ie \nConference fee \nThe conference registration fee is 20 euro for two days and 10 euro for one. \nIrish Landed Estates Special Interest Group \nAs part of the conference proceedings\, we are delighted to announce that an Irish landed Estates Special Interest Group will be launched.  The group will act as a branch of the Society for the Study of Nineteenth Century Ireland (SSNCI). The SSNCI committee has agreed to this decision. \nPublication of Conference proceedings \nAs part of our output for the Irish Landed Estates Special Interest Group we intend to publish conference proceedings. This will provide a wonderful opportunity to young scholars to have their work published.  At present we are considering either a special journal edition or an edited book. \nLunch and snacks at break times will be provided for all guests on both days. \nTwitter users may use the following: #landlordmoore
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/landlords-tenants-and-their-estates-in-ireland-1600-2013-september-13th-and-14th-2013/
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR