Trinity College Dublin - The University of Dublin

07/01/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 07/01/2024 02:36

25,000 new historical records released by Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland

25,000 new historical records released by Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland

Posted on: 01 July 2024

25,000 new historical records have been made freely available to the public to mark the 102nd anniversary of the destruction of the Public Record Office of Ireland on Sun, June 30th.

The records are available for the first time at the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (VRTI), a digital recreation of the Public Record Office and its collections launched in 2022.

Led by Trinity College Dublin, the VRTI is a collaboration between historians, computer scientists, archives, and libraries across the island of Ireland and around the word working to recreate, through digital technologies, our national archive, which was destroyed by fire in the opening battle of the Irish Civil War.

Two years on from its launch, the VRTI now has hundreds of thousands of digital images of replacement documents - transcripts and duplicates - identified in partner archives in Ireland and around the world.

The VRTI web experience has been upgraded for the 102nd anniversary with new features including enhanced navigation and discovery across its collections of digitised replacement documents and 100 million words of transcribed text. Four full-scale recreations of entire series of archives known as Gold Seams, and ten Curated Collections, are now also available.

Trinity historian Peter Crooks, Academic Director of the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland, said: "Since the Virtual Treasury was first launched in 2022 on the centenary of the Four Courts fire our collections, curated with the help of partners across Ireland, Britain and the USA, have doubled in scale. But this is only the beginning. We are continuously advancing technology and forging new partnerships to establish Ireland as a global leader in the creative exploration of digital archives. This year's releases illuminate seven centuries of Irish history, reaching back to the Middle Ages and stretching across the island, from 1821 census returns for Inishowen, Co. Donegal, to letters concerning the aftermath of the battle of Vinegar Hill, Co. Wexford, during the 1798 rebellion."

The research programme, which is hosted at the Science Foundation Ireland ADAPT Centre for AI-driven content, continues to pursue innovation, particularly in the area of Open Data. Looking ahead to 2025, Declan O'Sullivan, Professor in Computer Science, SFI ADAPT, Trinity College Dublin said: "My Computer Science team is leading the development of the Knowledge Graph for Irish History-a powerful tool that organizes and networks vast amounts of information as 5-star linked open data. In the coming year, we are excited to launch new tools to let the public and research community explore the graph, which will be seamlessly integrated into the VRTI website."

Highlights of documents released:

  • The new '1798 Rebellion' collection, curated in partnership with the National Archives, Ireland (NAI), provides digital access to the catalogue of 8,000 items in the Rebellion Papers, shining a light on this pivotal moment. This collection offers a unique insight into the birth of Irish Republicanism, as well as the nature of the 1798 Rebellion.
  • Detailed detective work is helping to uncover transcripts of the pre-Famine census destroyed in 1922. To date, VRTI has identified over 200,000 names from the lost pre-Famine census. A small sample of these transcribed records, held in the National Archives, Ireland and other archives across the island of Ireland, are now available online for the first time.
  • A precious 15th-century register from Armagh, conserved and digitised by the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, documenting relations between Gaelic Ulster and the English crown in the Middle Ages.
  • Medieval exchequer records digitised and translated up to 1327 by The National Archives UK including records relating to the pivotal years of the Scottish invasion of Ireland under King Robert Bruce.
  • A volume from the huge State Papers Ireland collection is now available free of charge on the VRTI, providing a view from London in the 1600s This a taster of the 26,000 images from The National Archives UK to be launched in 2025.

Minister for Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media, Catherine Martin, said:

"I welcome this exciting release of new research from the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland, as we mark the 102nd Anniversary of the Four Courts Fire in the opening engagement of the Civil War.

"The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland is a meaningful and important legacy of our Decade of Centenaries. In 2022, I was very pleased to approve funding of €3.6 million to support this new three-year phase of research from 2023 to 2025 - bringing my Department's total investment in the project since 2019 to over €6 million.

"It is wonderful to see what has been achieved - These archival sources will be of great interest to many different audiences, at home and abroad, who want to learn more about the story of our past. I welcome the research on the pre-Famine census records - which will give us a richer understanding of the lasting legacy of one of the most tragic and transformative events in our history. I am also delighted that in the past year the Virtual Record Treasury has brought its work to audiences in Donegal, Mayo, and Wicklow, directly connecting with communities whose deep histories are being made newly accessible.

"I congratulate the project team and sincerely thank each of the core partners who have so generously opened up their archives and shared their time and expertise."

Background:

On 30 June 2022, the centenary of the fire of 1922, the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (VRTI) was launched by Taoiseach Micheál Martin and Minister for Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media, Catherine Martin. The VRTI is the outcome of a five-year State-funded programme of research, led by Trinity College Dublin, combining historical investigation, archival conservation, and technical innovation to re-imagine and recreate, through digital technologies, the archive lost over a century ago. Its vast and growing treasury of replacement documents, shared by partner archives around the world, is freely and permanently available online.

The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland research programme is supported by the Irish Government through funding from the Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media under Project Ireland 2040.

Images:

First image: A proclamation issued on 27 October 1673 ordering that Peter Talbot, Roman Catholic archbishop of Dublin, and all other Roman Catholic archbishops, bishops, and regular priests, depart Ireland before 1 December 1673. Courtesy of The National Archives UK. View on the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland website here.

Second image: Graphic developed by Science Foundation Ireland ADAPT Centre for AI-driven content.

Third image: A copy of a prophecy in Irish, with an English translation [1795]. Courtesy of National Archives, Ireland. One of the very few Irish-language items in the Rebellion Papers, this letter provides an English translation of a popular prophecy circulating in the mid-1790s. It casts Irish history into a sequence of different 'ages', predicting that the current age of Ireland would end when 'the erins win the day'. It also includes snippets of another prophecy, popularly attributed to 'Mother Shipton', a sixteenth-century English prophetess. View on the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland website here.

Fourth image: A very early example of paper replacing parchment in Ireland, Archbishop Swayne's register dates from the mid-1400s. Sarah Graham, Head of Conservation at PRONI, carefully conserved this time-worn volume, revealing politics at the centre of church power and local dealings with Ulster's Gaelic lords and society. Here, Sarah applies gelatin to stabilise a page with intricate notarial marks - distinctive signs used by official scribes to authenticate legal documents. Photo courtesy of Sarah Graham, PRONI.

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