
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Max Pearson presents a collection of Witness History stories from the BBC World Service, this week we are focusing on Irish history.
In 2006, Ireland’s economic boom, known as the Celtic Tiger, ended. It meant thousands of people, like Michelle Burke, were left devastated as house construction stopped.
In 1959, Tralee, in Ireland, hosted a festival to promote the town and build Irish connections around the world. The Rose of Tralee is now one of Ireland’s oldest and largest festivals.
Veteran RTE broadcaster and author, Joe Duffy, walks us through the significance of the Celtic Tiger.
At Easter 1916, a small army of Irish rebels attempted to start a revolution against British rule. They held out for more than a week against a massive British military response, but the insurrection ultimately failed.
Also, how electrification lit up rural Ireland for the first time, despite concerns about its potential dangers.
And how a group of women fought against a sexist tradition, that prevented them from taking a dip in a popular swimming spot.
Contributors:
(Photo: Deserted 'ghost estate' in Ireland. Credit: Tim Graham/Getty Images)
By BBC World Service4.3
556556 ratings
Max Pearson presents a collection of Witness History stories from the BBC World Service, this week we are focusing on Irish history.
In 2006, Ireland’s economic boom, known as the Celtic Tiger, ended. It meant thousands of people, like Michelle Burke, were left devastated as house construction stopped.
In 1959, Tralee, in Ireland, hosted a festival to promote the town and build Irish connections around the world. The Rose of Tralee is now one of Ireland’s oldest and largest festivals.
Veteran RTE broadcaster and author, Joe Duffy, walks us through the significance of the Celtic Tiger.
At Easter 1916, a small army of Irish rebels attempted to start a revolution against British rule. They held out for more than a week against a massive British military response, but the insurrection ultimately failed.
Also, how electrification lit up rural Ireland for the first time, despite concerns about its potential dangers.
And how a group of women fought against a sexist tradition, that prevented them from taking a dip in a popular swimming spot.
Contributors:
(Photo: Deserted 'ghost estate' in Ireland. Credit: Tim Graham/Getty Images)

7,601 Listeners

377 Listeners

1,052 Listeners

5,477 Listeners

1,801 Listeners

3,205 Listeners

956 Listeners

1,877 Listeners

1,751 Listeners

1,040 Listeners

2,093 Listeners

482 Listeners

591 Listeners

4,784 Listeners

742 Listeners

848 Listeners

351 Listeners

3,175 Listeners

1,011 Listeners

2,483 Listeners

507 Listeners