Why the Most Powerful Person in Every Irish Village Was the Storyteller
The seanchaí was Ireland’s travelling storyteller, keeper of history and legend. Discover how this ancient tradition kept Irish culture alive for 3,000 years.
The seanchaí was Ireland’s travelling storyteller, keeper of history and legend. Discover how this ancient tradition kept Irish culture alive for 3,000 years.
Discover how the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland became one of the most Irish places on earth — and why its families still remember exactly where they came from.
Death notices on Irish local radio are a daily ritual like no other — a tradition that reveals how deeply Irish communities know and care for each other.
Make authentic pastéis de nata at home. Homemade rough puff pastry, silky egg custard with cinnamon and lemon, and perfectly caramelised dark tops — just like Lisbon.
On New Year’s Day 1892, a teenage girl from County Cork stepped forward at Ellis Island and made history as the very first immigrant processed through its gates. Here is her remarkable story.
The Irish once believed fairies would steal healthy babies and leave a changeling behind. Discover the signs families watched for and how they fought back.
Ireland’s high crosses aren’t just decorative stonework — they’re illustrated Bibles carved in stone. Discover what their carvings actually meant, and where to see the finest examples.
Sean-nós dance is Ireland’s oldest solo dance tradition — improvised, personal, and never performed the same way twice. Discover the old style from Connemara.
Discover the Irish good room — the sacred, untouched parlour kept for priests, doctors, and funerals that shaped Irish domestic life for generations.
When someone was dying in an old Irish home, the family didn’t just grieve. They moved quickly. West-facing windows were sealed shut. Doors facing the …