Listing 6 project(s) whose Institution is Royal Irish Academy (RIA)

Archive of Celtic-Latin Literature

ACLL is in construction as a full-text, searchable database of the Latin literature written by individuals in and from the Celtic-speaking periphery of Europe (Ireland, Wales, Brittany, Cornwall, Scotland and the Isle of Man) in roughly the period 400-1200 C.E. The corpus consists of about 1300 separate texts, varying from fragmentary inscriptions to learned treatises hundreds of pages long.

Documents on Irish Foreign Policy Online

Documents on Irish Foreign Policy (DIFP) is a project of the Royal Irish Academy, the Department of Foreign Affairs and the National Archives of Ireland and was established in 1997. The project publishes essential source material for anyone interested in the development of Irish foreign policy since 1919. Documents are now freely available and searchable online.

Doegen Records Web Project

This project will publish the Doegen sound archive of native Irish speakers from the early 20th century on the web. The archive consists of over 200 records made during the period 1928-31 and includes speakers from each of the four provinces. Items recorded include stories, songs and prayers.

Irish Resources in the Humanities

Irish Resources in the Humanities is as a gateway to sites on the World Wide Web that contain substantial content in the various disciplines of the humanities in the area of Irish Studies. As a rule, commercial sites are not linked.

St Patrick’s Confessio Hypertext Stack Project

The Latin writings of St Patrick are of crucial importance for Irish history and ecclesiastical culture. The Royal Irish Academy’s Dictionary of Medieval Latin from Celtic Sources project has been granted funding under PRTLI, Cycle 4 to construct, on line, a hypertext stack that will present different aspects of St Patrick’s work at various levels, closely interlinked passage by passage.

Thomas MacGreevy Archive

The Thomas MacGreevy Archive is a long-term, interdisciplinary research project that explores the life, writings, and relationships of the Irish poet and critic, Thomas MacGreevy (1893-1967).