Ireland until relatively recently was populated with an island full of survivalists. Hard and tough people with hearts of gold and a sense of humour that never gets old.
@I HATE TOUCANS ummmmm so I'm irish and 4.904 million seems like a lot to me and if you don't believe me look up the population is and what my name (aisling)means
@I HATE TOUCANS WOW !!!! What a bold statement and so very wrong. Ireland is a small island and is overpopulated in my opinion and overpopulated Ireland has lost her charm because of this very fact. Tourists used to flock to Ireland to meet the famous Irish story tellers, musicians, matchmakers, joke tellers and rogues. Now it is like all the other countries in the world, a bland, boring mix of everyone from everywhere with no specific identity. As for Ireland's presence on the "European Stage" !!!! Ireland currently has 13 members in the European Parliament, the executive director of the World Health Organization (WHO) is Dr. Michael Ryan from Sligo,Ireland, the Irish police (An Garda Siochana) and ex members play a bigger role in Interpol (Europe's FBI) than any other European nation etc. etc. etc. You are so misinformed. Ireland as always is punching way above her weight and has a big presence the world over not just the EU.
Same here Sophia we're lucky we're able to appreciate the beauty of our country and our young people are the best of us all open minded and kind and still very much have a scence of mischief the most thing I miss about my youth.
I spent two years in Ireland.It is really a very beautiful country and the people are great.My favourite place in Ireland us Galway and the Aran Island.We went to the Aran Island by ferry from Galway and stayed there for two days.It was an amazing experience with my friends.I would love to visit Ireland again in future.Respect to the people of Ireland who made it a great country!!
Spiddal and Claddagh geographically close but that was all, the Claddagh were even poorer than spiddal but you can see the pride they took in themselves ,fiercly independent .
B McC - despite the poverty that dress is stunning. I love the huge hood, you can sense her hiding within it against against wind and rain. Would love to see fashion like that around today but I doubt it would look as good on tattooed persons !!
Lovely images. Thank you for putting together and sharing. NOTE that the image at 6:14 is not women "weaving" (there is no loom), but women "spinning" fiber (likely wool) into yarn using a spinning wheel. The spun yarn/fiber could be used for either either knitting or weaving. (Although knitting would be a more likely craft in a poorer croft.)
Brings tears to my eyes. It's not often I see old pictures like this, never mind in colour. So beautiful. It makes you feel more connected to the past. The people look like they could have been photographed just yesterday in some of them. So much has changed in this country and yet so much still looks the same, but it really makes me sad for the traditions that we've lost and the almost complete disappearance of our language.
You're wrong regarding our language. There is more 'Gael Scoil' in Ireland now than there has been in many many a year.. And as for our traditions... Well Irish Dancing is extremely popular throughout the world these days.. More children are playing hurling than were in the 80's and 90's.. There are more children learning traditional Instruments than there were 20 years ago.... Get yourself out and take a look around.. Talk to people... Get involved instead of sitting there being sad... Saddo.
Apart from the clothes and the currachs, Connemara looks pretty much the same today. Beautiful landscape. Glendalough too looks the same except for the tourist car parks :)
This came up in my recommended and I'm not one bit sorry I clicked on it! Crazy seeing what life was like for our grandparents grandparents in such good detail! A very different Ireland from the one we know now! !
Amazing to see how far Ireland has come since the days of desperation and poverty in the very recent past. Many problems persist today but we're a forward looking nation proud of our place in the world. Thanks for uploading.
@@Daisy-ct3nh Shit then, I suppose we better get rid of all the vikings, Normans, Scots, English, French and Flemish settlers who've invaded our land in the last 1000 or so years.
The picture at 4:34 in particular hits home with me. My family are from donegal, where turf is still a main source of home heating for us. if you substituted the shirt and trousers for a Jersey and jeans, this photo could have been taken yesterday, and I think that's insane. More than a hundred years and not much has changed, all things considered
What wonderful photos. Galway is a homey town. I loved our whole trip. The landscape is luscious. Ireland is one place I would love to take a second trip to. Thank you for sharing. 🦋🦋🦋
Ireland still has some of that charm. The Cladagh still there. Wonder why havent we preserved the Cladagh dress even for folk events...its amazing. Sooo much red...red on green...gorgeous place my foster home.
Thankyou for posting this my mother (Quinn) from bohermore rd, and my father from rural galway. I expect not many living there are originally from there. Greeting from uk💚
I'm a McNamara but we are from Keel, Achill Island, County Mayo. My cousin went over from Cleveland, Ohio, US to the island, she proudly told a bartender "I'm a McNamara, we are from here" expecting to be welcomed like long lost kin. He said, "yeah, aren't you all" and went on polishing the glasses.
❤this I'm not Irish, but have a deep ❤for Ireland and the Irish people, beautiful people who know what it is like to live through hard times yet very hospitable and beautiful culture
@serendipidus1 the people that are suffering true famine in africa have no way of escaping and the asylum seekers are not asylum seekers if they have to go true 20 plus countries to get to ireland there economic migrants. and see this shit "If you were truly Irish" he is more irish than you considering he actually gives a fuck about the country by acknowledging the problems that we have. we don't owe anybody anything except are dead and future irish generations
@serendipidus1 you think irish spirit is immigration irish spirit is holding on to this island no matter the cost not running away from it .and where not availing of their services were availing of are services that we pay for true taxation. services that we put in place to look after our own less fortunate. immigrants take full advantage of are services like council housing ETC. doctors get paid what do you think there doing it all out of the good of there harts. and very few of them are doctors besides it is irrelevant who they are and what they do. they have no right to this island. and irish people that have emigrated is a completely irrelevant argument go over to america and take it up with them because it means nothing hear pure whataboutism. speaking of whataboutism if all the the irish decided to move to Eswatini and out populate the natives would that be a good thing or a bad thing in your opening
My great, great, great grandfather was an Irishman I believe from county Cork. He was a Sullivan and migrated to New Zealand and a whaler. We were given a video from a friend of ours showing the remains of their castle and history. It was said that the English, was it Oliver Cromwell? Their murderous escapades almost wiping out the clan owing to their resistance to English sovereignty. We also had a dear a Dermot Childs, now deceased from that same area a wonderful family. Anyway there are plenty Sullivans now, part Maori in Australia as well. Just thought I mention it. Thank you for sharing your video. Arohanui from New Zealand.
How much has changed in the past 100 years! I got my mother a dna test from ancestry and the recent update showed she is 62% Irish and the rest is Scottish and Cornish. She is pretty much a pure Gaelic Celt.
Marvellous photo's, if somewhat sobering. The sheer grinding poverty of most of the Irish in these photos, tattered clothing and no shoes. Thanks Britain, a real testimony to your regard for Ireland and the Irish during our time under your yoke!
Thanks for these pictures of Ireland. They were taken within weeks of when my grandfather emigrated as a teen, never to see the land or his parents again. The cloaks the women are wearing are very similar to the Munster cloaks worn all over the rural southern counties by women, and which can stiil be found by diligent search. My grandmother was also a young teenager in Cork, south and east of where these photos were taken, at the time. Kahn must have been very prescient to have undertaken this photo project on the eve of The Great War WWI, which began the vast destruction and transformations of the dark and bloody 20th century. The picture of the Anglo-Irish landlord's masion, which has an ominous photo fault on the left resembling smoke and fire, might have been one of the ones blown up, burned or abandoned by the English during and after the Irish War of Independence, which began in earnest less than six years after these photographs. It's very interesting to see the world my people were forced to flee by religious, political and economic oppression. Thanks for revealing the "white privilege" of my people, as the contemporary government of Ireland refers to it, through their recent immigrant spokespeople.
White privilege doesn’t mean white people dont have struggles, it means their skin colour isn’t the cause of struggle i.e racism/ police brutality “White privilege, or white skin privilege, is the societal privilege that benefits white people over non-white people in some societies, particularly if they are otherwise under the same social, political, or economic circumstances. With roots in European colonialism and imperialism, and the Atlantic slave trade, white privilege has developed in circumstances that have broadly sought to protect white racial privileges, various national citizenships and other rights or special benefits”
blackswan20 no. I do think reparations by the British are in order i.e funding Gaeltachts, Irish heritage centers, Irish language/ culture centers though. White privilege is a big problem in the states from what I gather. OP seems to think that because our people have had tremendous struggles that white privilege is a myth. It’s not.
blackswan20 don’t have kids or grandkids considering my age. Don’t have a victim mentality. Don’t expect reparations from a kid on a northern council estate nor a pensioner rather, the government. It’s not a victim mentality to want what was once destroyed to be rebuilt. We go to school for years, learn Irish and all for what? Not being able to use it or remember it? White privilege means white people don’t need to worry about being killed every time the cops pull them over, or being racially profiled as a threat, or a thief, or violent. I don’t want anyone to provide for me, I don’t know where you got that from, I provide for myself. All I said was the British government could fund Gaelic heritage centres, Irish language centres ect. An apology for Bloody Sunday after a 12 year inquiry isn’t enough. “Victim mentality” my bollocks. Good luck to ya
What beautiful pictures and what a beautiful place. It looks so peaceful. The men, women and their children worked very hard labor, they took many risks and discovered just how far they can really go.
Wonderful. May ancestors mostly escaped Ireland for England by about 1852 (although my great grandfather only left in the 1860s but his father was able to take over the land he farmed from about 1820 so they were not in such a bad way).
Fun fact Irish doesn't have a word for "shoes" the word "Bróga" means shoes by some but that refers to the type of shoe worn in a kilt. Shoes weren't worn then.
i used to take care of an elderly man called michael padden, from county mayo. passed away in 2018. let me tell you he had the temperament of a banshee, drank like, well, an irish and his last shower/bath was in 1763. was never sick and not even the flies dared to enter his room.
Lovely to see what my country locked like back in the day . When we were really Irish . Now most of the Irish people are left wing Europe and forget our past . But not me i am a Irish man from Dublin till i die . God bless you . Nice video ☘☘☘☘☘
@@sofiakhan1917 Ah I'm from Kildare and I always find it so interesting when travelling around that such a small country can have so many different accents
Jessica Price yeah , a lot of teachers are form all over the country, I’ve never really had lots of teachers form Dublin , they were all from the west /north/central Ireland
@@joebloggs2473 ah no dude ,,,,hardships are having no money to feed ur children ,, no electric ,,,,,handed down clothing and shoes,,,no firing ,,,,,and disease like TB and whooping cough killing ur family ,,,,,,relevant is right but life was shorter and harder then
This is true diversity, the diversity of different people's and their culture. This homogeneous world the financial elites are building at the moment is a Frankenstein.
Bhí mé ag gabháil a scríobh an ruda chéarna. Tá na duifreacha eadar na tíorthaí ag laghdughadh ó bhliadhain go bliadhain. Tá na teangthacha ag fagháilt bháis. Muna ndéantar rud ar bith beidh achan nduine cosamhail le Meiriceánach i gcionn cupla bliadhain. Ní bheidh mise, cibith...
Looking at poverty in Ireland in those makes me scream!! Part of United Kingdom, Great Greedy British Empire. Always so badly treated by briths, during hard times not getting any help from them at all. I love Ireland, not only because the music and atmosphere 😂 but also to see that this nation haven't loose their proud, as much as British wanted to break them, they remained Proud Irish. Just the shame that the language didn't survive... :(
so what? let us have this image. this was what it was like when our ancestors fled. can't we hold this image in our collective mind? can you a least give us that?
@@ivartheboneless5969 nope, we know the difference. you're just disrespectful of the image we had when we left. You act like we are ignorant to it; we're not!
This video makes you realize what it must have been like for many people around the world, in the earth 20th Century. And, what it’s still like for many, in undeveloped countries! Their people still struggle for just the basics of shelter, food, & health, and maybe an education, if at all possible.
*A Story About Irish White PRIVILIGE:* As a young boy, I returned to Ireland with my direct family and my nan. We were driving down this one lane, and she said "ooh I remember this". She told us to drive around the corner. We found her Church - then from there we managed to find her old house. It was in a field, in the middle of nowhere. It was much like the thatched rooved buildings you see in this video. It only had two rooms, and wasn't very large. She recounted how, after her parents died (due to childbirth and illness), she was adopted and taken in by her Uncle. Apparently, she and her brother, aswell as 9 of her Uncles Children ALL LIVED under this same roof LOL. Severe and unimagine levels of poverty!! *No wonder she moved to England when she was 14!!!* What a life and family she built for herself though. She overcame so much, and despite my English Granddad leaving her with 4 kids for another woman, my Nan was always the cornerstone and foundation of my Mom's side of the Family. Her presence alone, not to mention the family home she brought everyone up in and kept till her death, was always that of a polite, innocent, warm, and nurturing flame - that would completely put you at ease and fill you with inner strength and confidence. She even worked most of her life to support her family, even into her late 70s. Not many women like that nowadays.
Ireland until relatively recently was populated with an island full of survivalists. Hard and tough people with hearts of gold and a sense of humour that never gets old.
@I HATE TOUCANS ummmmm so I'm irish and 4.904 million seems like a lot to me and if you don't believe me look up the population is and what my name (aisling)means
@I HATE TOUCANS We dont need more people in Ireland. I like having a small population. The UK is just one big parking lot, we dont want that here.
@I HATE TOUCANS WOW !!!! What a bold statement and so very wrong. Ireland is a small island and is overpopulated in my opinion and overpopulated Ireland has lost her charm because of this very fact. Tourists used to flock to Ireland to meet the famous Irish story tellers, musicians, matchmakers, joke tellers and rogues. Now it is like all the other countries in the world, a bland, boring mix of everyone from everywhere with no specific identity. As for Ireland's presence on the "European Stage" !!!! Ireland currently has 13 members in the European Parliament, the executive director of the World Health Organization (WHO) is Dr. Michael Ryan from Sligo,Ireland, the Irish police (An Garda Siochana) and ex members play a bigger role in Interpol (Europe's FBI) than any other European nation etc. etc. etc. You are so misinformed. Ireland as always is punching way above her weight and has a big presence the world over not just the EU.
@ I love it...
@Chad Brömann the day we set down our arms and got in bed with those orange bastards. Tiocfaidh ar lá.
I'm Irish it is one amazing stunning country I'm blessed to be forever green ❤️💖💚🇮🇪
Same here Sophia we're lucky we're able to appreciate the beauty of our country and our young people are the best of us all open minded and kind and still very much have a scence of mischief the most thing I miss about my youth.
Very proud of my Irish heritage.
Ireland is outstandingly beautiful & I am blessed to live here..x
I never appreciated it till I moved to the wesht
Good for you I am English sorry but have some Irish roots that I am proud offyes been to Ireland was beautiful and friendly.
With love and blessings from Germany❤
I spent two years in Ireland.It is really a very beautiful country and the people are great.My favourite place in Ireland us Galway and the Aran Island.We went to the Aran Island by ferry from Galway and stayed there for two days.It was an amazing experience with my friends.I would love to visit Ireland again in future.Respect to the people of Ireland who made it a great country!!
That woman in the red claddagh dress was mesmerising
Spiddal and Claddagh geographically close but that was all, the Claddagh were even poorer than spiddal but you can see the pride they took in themselves ,fiercly independent .
B McC oh, I thought so too & I love the claudaughs, still.
I know! I wish I could see it up close.
B McC - despite the poverty that dress is stunning. I love the huge hood, you can sense her hiding within it against against wind and rain. Would love to see fashion like that around today but I doubt it would look as good on tattooed persons !!
@@dryflyman7121 doubt you'd see any tattoos so can't see how that's relevant
I wish my grandma had her last wishes and got to go back to Ireland...she always spoke about it
Great photos! Love from your siblings across the pond. 🏴❤️🇮🇪 our culture and traditions are so closely tied.
That red is something else Haunting
Lovely images. Thank you for putting together and sharing. NOTE that the image at 6:14 is not women "weaving" (there is no loom), but women "spinning" fiber (likely wool) into yarn using a spinning wheel. The spun yarn/fiber could be used for either either knitting or weaving. (Although knitting would be a more likely craft in a poorer croft.)
Brings tears to my eyes. It's not often I see old pictures like this, never mind in colour. So beautiful. It makes you feel more connected to the past. The people look like they could have been photographed just yesterday in some of them. So much has changed in this country and yet so much still looks the same, but it really makes me sad for the traditions that we've lost and the almost complete disappearance of our language.
It's a rich culture in music and speech
ruclips.net/video/BuN5rf0CoI8/видео.html
You're wrong regarding our language. There is more 'Gael Scoil' in Ireland now than there has been in many many a year.. And as for our traditions... Well Irish Dancing is extremely popular throughout the world these days.. More children are playing hurling than were in the 80's and 90's.. There are more children learning traditional Instruments than there were 20 years ago.... Get yourself out and take a look around.. Talk to people... Get involved instead of sitting there being sad... Saddo.
@@tearitloosetearitloose4670 obviously he does not live near the ages of civilization (costal areas only)
I send you these words with love: there is no need to mourn the loss of things we still have.🇮🇪💚✌🏼💚🇮🇪
Such a shame what became of the Claddagh but the symbolism lives on in jewellery ☘️
Apart from the clothes and the currachs, Connemara looks pretty much the same today. Beautiful landscape. Glendalough too looks the same except for the tourist car parks :)
Apart from the mosque, lol
I absolutely agree about Glendalough. I was just thinking it looks exactly the same.
Was in Clonmacnoise recently and from the angles pictured, looks virtually the same also.
Who randomly gotthis on their recommends because I did😂😂😂
Yes I don’t know why
Everyone
The collection is more valuable as time goes by! What a collection from 1913 !
This came up in my recommended and I'm not one bit sorry I clicked on it! Crazy seeing what life was like for our grandparents grandparents in such good detail! A very different Ireland from the one we know now! !
Amazing to see how far Ireland has come since the days of desperation and poverty in the very recent past. Many problems persist today but we're a forward looking nation proud of our place in the world. Thanks for uploading.
And Irish women aRE FINE
Pity the EU are turning it into a multi culti shithole.
Diversity is far from a strength
You're being replaced in your own land
@@Daisy-ct3nh Shit then, I suppose we better get rid of all the vikings, Normans, Scots, English, French and Flemish settlers who've invaded our land in the last 1000 or so years.
ruclips.net/video/BuN5rf0CoI8/видео.html
The picture at 4:34 in particular hits home with me. My family are from donegal, where turf is still a main source of home heating for us. if you substituted the shirt and trousers for a Jersey and jeans, this photo could have been taken yesterday, and I think that's insane. More than a hundred years and not much has changed, all things considered
What wonderful photos. Galway is a homey town. I loved our whole trip. The landscape is luscious. Ireland is one place I would love to take a second trip to. Thank you for sharing. 🦋🦋🦋
Where about in Galway were you if you don't mind saying cause I'm from there
Beautiful record! I journeyed a few years ago to Paris to view them in the museum! Wonderful experience! Thank you for sharing!
WHAT A PLEASURE! THHANKS VERY MUCH.
Amazing photo’s!
A time capsule in pictures! 💕
Thank you! 🥰
Ireland still has some of that charm. The Cladagh still there. Wonder why havent we preserved the Cladagh dress even for folk events...its amazing. Sooo much red...red on green...gorgeous place my foster home.
Wonderful , thank you.
The colour makes the pictures seem more real for me.
Irish hands create gold such an awesome nation GOD BLESS IRELAND!
Thankyou for posting this my mother (Quinn) from bohermore rd, and my father from rural galway. I expect not many living there are originally from there. Greeting from uk💚
My mother's family are a long line of McNamara's (Mac Con Marra) and I have always wanted to go to Ireland! 💚from Canada
You should come you would be very welcome ☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️
@@saulpaulsaul3378 thank u, its at the top of my destination list, whenever that's possible again!!
"mac cú na mara", son of the seahound. it's a limerickk name, the place is still full of them.
I'm a McNamara but we are from Keel, Achill Island, County Mayo.
My cousin went over from Cleveland, Ohio, US to the island, she proudly told a bartender "I'm a McNamara, we are from here" expecting to be welcomed like long lost kin. He said, "yeah, aren't you all" and went on polishing the glasses.
@@kateeilers574 lol, thats exactly what I'd expect from the bar tender lol
these pictures are great. I’m so happy they did this & the color? Hard to believe over 100 yrs old. I still love how the claudaugh looks.
Back then men and woman where made of iron!!!
❤this I'm not Irish, but have a deep ❤for Ireland and the Irish people, beautiful people who know what it is like to live through hard times yet very hospitable and beautiful culture
Rite on point.still untouched in some places .Dublin girl here.Still here .Love the pics
THANK YOU... I ENJOYED SEEING THE ORDINARY PEOPLE
Thanks for this. Kind of sad that a certain way of life has fallen by the way side as history has moved on.
@@annesmith9181 and now racists like you but you're the only bad thing on that list.
@serendipidus1 the people that are suffering true famine in africa have no way of escaping and the asylum seekers are not asylum seekers if they have to go true 20 plus countries to get to ireland there economic migrants. and see this shit "If you were truly Irish" he is more irish than you considering he actually gives a fuck about the country by acknowledging the problems that we have. we don't owe anybody anything except are dead and future irish generations
@serendipidus1 well said there was nothing but poverty and hardship back then and people dieing of old age at fourty
@serendipidus1 yeah i supose
@serendipidus1 you think irish spirit is immigration irish spirit is holding on to this island no matter the cost not running away from it .and where not availing of their services were availing of are services that we pay for true taxation. services that we put in place to look after our own less fortunate. immigrants take full advantage of are services like council housing ETC. doctors get paid what do you think there doing it all out of the good of there harts. and very few of them are doctors besides it is irrelevant who they are and what they do. they have no right to this island. and irish people that have emigrated is a completely irrelevant argument go over to america and take it up with them because it means nothing hear pure whataboutism. speaking of whataboutism if all the the irish decided to move to Eswatini and out populate the natives would that be a good thing or a bad thing in your opening
This was insanely stunning and beautiful
Thank you for sharing! And thank you Marguerite & Madeleine 😍
Marvellous photos and excellent background music.
Excellent 👌
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
ireland was so beautiful back then. i would love to be able to travel back to see what it was like living in ireland then 👍
Izzy O ngl lie to ye fella it’s still like that just go to the country side in county limerick. It’s the same just with nackers everywhere
@@jamieunited6177 been to limerick plenty of times it would just be nice to see people who aren’t covered in orange 😅😂
@@izo6806 oh the girls you mean 😂 they use an insane amount of fake tan lol
Thank you for sharing.
Fascinating and beautiful
Beautiful!
Life was poor yet there is something so serene about these pictures.
Poor, now to a rich country.
That spends barely anything on the military.. and the WiFi lmao.
@@urma7713 we don't need to spend on the military.
@@EK-rx2ju We do.
Who’s gonna invade us
@@doledole2539 We haven't been invaded in like.. forever.
My great, great, great grandfather was an Irishman I believe from county Cork. He was a Sullivan and migrated to New Zealand and a whaler. We were given a video from a friend of ours showing the remains of their castle and history. It was said that the English, was it Oliver Cromwell? Their murderous escapades almost wiping out the clan owing to their resistance to English sovereignty. We also had a dear a Dermot Childs, now deceased from that same area a wonderful family. Anyway there are plenty Sullivans now, part Maori in Australia as well. Just thought I mention it. Thank you for sharing your video. Arohanui from New Zealand.
Sullivan/Súil Amháin/One Eyed. A big Clann still here in Éire.
I usually hate background music in YT videos, but the music in this one was fitting and fun.
Very interesting! My Grandparents were from that era and area!♥️
I went in holiday on Ireland,, such a fantastic country. Glad of that travel and decision.
Beautiful thank you so much for posting this. I’m so proud to be Irish ❤️❤️❤️🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪
This was awesome, thank you for sharing it.
Beautiful, thank you!!
I love my country 🇮🇪💚☘️
How much has changed in the past 100 years! I got my mother a dna test from ancestry and the recent update showed she is 62% Irish and the rest is Scottish and Cornish. She is pretty much a pure Gaelic Celt.
Absolutely brilliant.
Fabulous step back in time, oh for those days
like the uilleann pipes playing
Like the banjo too, but I'm biased! lol
Beautiful. Thanks
Marvellous photo's, if somewhat sobering. The sheer grinding poverty of most of the Irish in these photos, tattered clothing and no shoes. Thanks Britain, a real testimony to your regard for Ireland and the Irish during our time under your yoke!
Love irish history
My grandfather was from Bunnyconlin and my grandmother from Swinford, both in Mayo. They lived there right around 1912-1940
There may be ice tonight near Lough talt., I not from there but I remember a shortcut from by the lake
wow i’m 12 but i’m irish, i’m so glad i didn’t have to experience the famine. rip angels
God Bless The True People Of Ireland !
Thank you..x
Thanks
Someone else may have already mentioned this, but the woman at ~6:20 is spinning, not weaving.
God bless Ireland and it’s people
There was a lot of hardship.
This is about the time my Grandma was living in County Mayo. Going to school and getting on with farm work on the Corley farm.
Thanks for these pictures of Ireland. They were taken within weeks of when my grandfather emigrated as a teen, never to see the land or his parents again. The cloaks the women are wearing are very similar to the Munster cloaks worn all over the rural southern counties by women, and which can stiil be found by diligent search. My grandmother was also a young teenager in Cork, south and east of where these photos were taken, at the time. Kahn must have been very prescient to have undertaken this photo project on the eve of The Great War WWI, which began the vast destruction and transformations of the dark and bloody 20th century. The picture of the Anglo-Irish landlord's masion, which has an ominous photo fault on the left resembling smoke and fire, might have been one of the ones blown up, burned or abandoned by the English during and after the Irish War of Independence, which began in earnest less than six years after these photographs.
It's very interesting to see the world my people were forced to flee by religious, political and economic oppression. Thanks for revealing the "white privilege" of my people, as the contemporary government of Ireland refers to it, through their recent immigrant spokespeople.
White privilege doesn’t mean white people dont have struggles, it means their skin colour isn’t the cause of struggle i.e racism/ police brutality
“White privilege, or white skin privilege, is the societal privilege that benefits white people over non-white people in some societies, particularly if they are otherwise under the same social, political, or economic circumstances. With roots in European colonialism and imperialism, and the Atlantic slave trade, white privilege has developed in circumstances that have broadly sought to protect white racial privileges, various national citizenships and other rights or special benefits”
blackswan20 where are you from?
blackswan20 just wondering if you’re Irish or American or something
blackswan20 no. I do think reparations by the British are in order i.e funding Gaeltachts, Irish heritage centers, Irish language/ culture centers though. White privilege is a big problem in the states from what I gather. OP seems to think that because our people have had tremendous struggles that white privilege is a myth. It’s not.
blackswan20 don’t have kids or grandkids considering my age. Don’t have a victim mentality. Don’t expect reparations from a kid on a northern council estate nor a pensioner rather, the government. It’s not a victim mentality to want what was once destroyed to be rebuilt. We go to school for years, learn Irish and all for what? Not being able to use it or remember it? White privilege means white people don’t need to worry about being killed every time the cops pull them over, or being racially profiled as a threat, or a thief, or violent. I don’t want anyone to provide for me, I don’t know where you got that from, I provide for myself. All I said was the British government could fund Gaelic heritage centres, Irish language centres ect. An apology for Bloody Sunday after a 12 year inquiry isn’t enough. “Victim mentality” my bollocks. Good luck to ya
Because of the muted colours and very slight lack of sharpness, some of these look like watercolour paintings.
No wonder we drink so much.
Hauntingly beautiful
Enjoyed and thank you.
God bless Marguerite and Madeleine!
What beautiful pictures and what a beautiful place. It looks so peaceful. The men, women and their children worked very hard labor, they took many risks and discovered just how far they can really go.
Irish music is always so jolly
Tough times and even tougher people
To think we were still serfs at the time of these wonderful photographs 🇮🇪☘🍀
@Nunquam Non Paratus of course 🇮🇪🍀
I'm from Galway. Wow. This is so interesting.
very nice pictures and music
So beautiful. Ave Maria+++
I enjoyed the pictures of the land of my ancestors.❤
Beauty full. Go raibh mile maith agat. ❤️☘️❤️
some photos remind me of my days as a turf cutter in co. antrim...a bog man...
Clonmacnaoise hasnt changed a whole lot in a hundred years.
nor the recipe of Mayonoise and the world has not ended.
miguel pedroso not yet
Wonderful film .
That traditional dress is beautiful
It’s beautiful. I like the traditional dress too.
so sad. what did they go through without internet, it's so heart whelming
Wonderful. May ancestors mostly escaped Ireland for England by about 1852 (although my great grandfather only left in the 1860s but his father was able to take over the land he farmed from about 1820 so they were not in such a bad way).
There is a short documentary on here somewhere about their travels in Ireland and some of the things they wrote.
Thank you very much 😊
Fun fact Irish doesn't have a word for "shoes" the word "Bróga" means shoes by some but that refers to the type of shoe worn in a kilt.
Shoes weren't worn then.
yeah this is bs ...these people are not representative of Irish people at the time ..
@Pat Alessi That's where the word brogue comes from :)
@@silverkitty2503 I met people living in thatched houses in 1970
i used to take care of an elderly man called michael padden, from county mayo. passed away in 2018. let me tell you he had the temperament of a banshee, drank like, well, an irish and his last shower/bath was in 1763. was never sick and not even the flies dared to enter his room.
Sounds like a great man 🙂
Lovely to see what my country locked like back in the day . When we were really Irish . Now most of the Irish people are left wing Europe and forget our past . But not me i am a Irish man from Dublin till i die . God bless you . Nice video ☘☘☘☘☘
Nah the irish spirit will never die I don't know where these European so an so's you speak of are their not in my circle..
Irish to core 🇮🇪☘🍀💯
Are you serious. The country is over rún with foreign criminals
@@Daisy-ct3nh loads of brits too
All I can think of when looking at these pictures is how strong their accents must have been
there are things more important than noticing strong accent
Most of us don’t even have strong accents (at least not in Dublin)
@@sofiakhan1917 Ah I'm from Kildare and I always find it so interesting when travelling around that such a small country can have so many different accents
Jessica Price yeah , a lot of teachers are form all over the country, I’ve never really had lots of teachers form Dublin , they were all from the west /north/central Ireland
some wouldn't even speak English but only Irish.
Thanks for sharing
Very gorgeous place
Good to see the movie ,,,my mum often told me of the hardships of her day in the 30,s
What are hardships? Not having a coloured TV in your bedroom? All is relevant.
@@joebloggs2473 ah no dude ,,,,hardships are having no money to feed ur children ,, no electric ,,,,,handed down clothing and shoes,,,no firing ,,,,,and disease like TB and whooping cough killing ur family ,,,,,,relevant is right but life was shorter and harder then
This is true diversity, the diversity of different people's and their culture. This homogeneous world the financial elites are building at the moment is a Frankenstein.
Bhí mé ag gabháil a scríobh an ruda chéarna. Tá na duifreacha eadar na tíorthaí ag laghdughadh ó bhliadhain go bliadhain. Tá na teangthacha ag fagháilt bháis. Muna ndéantar rud ar bith beidh achan nduine cosamhail le Meiriceánach i gcionn cupla bliadhain. Ní bheidh mise, cibith...
Looking at poverty in Ireland in those makes me scream!! Part of United Kingdom, Great Greedy British Empire. Always so badly treated by briths, during hard times not getting any help from them at all. I love Ireland, not only because the music and atmosphere 😂 but also to see that this nation haven't loose their proud, as much as British wanted to break them, they remained Proud Irish. Just the shame that the language didn't survive... :(
@@DonBean-ej4ou well it's a harsh reality. The British Empire made the native population destitute for centuries.
Visited many of these places, just fantastic .
I'm guessing this is what Americans think of when they hear Ireland 🤦♀️
so what? let us have this image. this was what it was like when our ancestors fled. can't we hold this image in our collective mind? can you a least give us that?
@@Declan_Moriarty maybe learn the difference between old Ireland and what it is now, is all they are saying, someone hurt u? Lol
@@ivartheboneless5969 nope, we know the difference. you're just disrespectful of the image we had when we left. You act like we are ignorant to it; we're not!
Read a book or two lad or watch a video or two. Educate yourself.
Americans be like I’m Irish!!!1!1!1!1!1!!!!!🍀🥴
Wish I can go back to the 1800s with a time machine
Cliffs of Moher I wouldn’t especially not to exactly 1847 during the great Irish famine
Don't recommend it
Youd think that but in actuality you really don't extremely barbaric events went on
@@sheamusfoskin9523 You mean more "barbaric" than the events of the 20th and 21st centuries?
@@ibrahimsulaiman9047 yes because at least we have better remedies today than were available back then
This video makes you realize what it must have been like for many people around the world, in the earth 20th Century. And, what it’s still like for many, in undeveloped countries! Their people still struggle for just the basics of shelter, food, & health, and maybe an education, if at all possible.
My grandfather was a British boy soldier who had a run in with a sergeant and deserted. He was helped by some French people in Ireland. Who knows.
*A Story About Irish White PRIVILIGE:*
As a young boy, I returned to Ireland with my direct family and my nan. We were driving down this one lane, and she said "ooh I remember this". She told us to drive around the corner. We found her Church - then from there we managed to find her old house.
It was in a field, in the middle of nowhere. It was much like the thatched rooved buildings you see in this video. It only had two rooms, and wasn't very large.
She recounted how, after her parents died (due to childbirth and illness), she was adopted and taken in by her Uncle. Apparently, she and her brother, aswell as 9 of her Uncles Children ALL LIVED under this same roof LOL. Severe and unimagine levels of poverty!! *No wonder she moved to England when she was 14!!!*
What a life and family she built for herself though. She overcame so much, and despite my English Granddad leaving her with 4 kids for another woman, my Nan was always the cornerstone and foundation of my Mom's side of the Family. Her presence alone, not to mention the family home she brought everyone up in and kept till her death, was always that of a polite, innocent, warm, and nurturing flame - that would completely put you at ease and fill you with inner strength and confidence.
She even worked most of her life to support her family, even into her late 70s. Not many women like that nowadays.