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snadhghus
Ирландия
Добавлен 25 ноя 2006
Éadaí Traidisiúnta Árann | Traditional Aran Islands Clothing
Pampooties, Cloudanna & Cótaí Dearga - Clár faisnéise de chuid TG4 i dtaobh éadaí traidisiúnta Árann.
Pampooties, Clouds & Red Skirts - TG4 documentary about the traditional clothing of the Aran Islands.
Pampooties, Clouds & Red Skirts - TG4 documentary about the traditional clothing of the Aran Islands.
Просмотров: 11 027
Видео
Voices of Victorian London
Просмотров 78 тыс.4 года назад
1996 episode of the BBC documentary series 'Timewatch'. Dramatisations of some of the interviews conducted by Henry Mayhew with London's poor in the 1840's, originally published in his work 'London Labour and the London Poor'.
Peter Ackroyd's London - 3/3 Water and Darkness
Просмотров 20 тыс.4 года назад
2004 BBC Documentary. Parts 1 & 2 available here: ruclips.net/video/wEKQb6IDO0Q/видео.html ruclips.net/video/NW0N77KPZss/видео.html
Telling Stories to Ourselves
Просмотров 6 тыс.4 года назад
The history of drama production by RTÉ (including 'The Riordans', 'Strumpet City', 'Glenroe', etc). Broadcast in 2002.
Ar Stáitse: Douglas Gunn Ensemble
Просмотров 2,2 тыс.6 лет назад
Four pieces of Irish music performed by the Douglas Gunn Ensemble in 1976. 0:00 Sídh Bheag, Sídh Mhór 4:33 The Flower of Magherally 6:53 Carolan's Concerto 8:27 Here's a Health to the Company
Léargas: Faoi Sholas an Riadaigh (Seán Ó Riada)
Просмотров 7 тыс.6 лет назад
Clár faisnéise de chuid RTÉ faoin gceoltóir agus cumadóir ceoil Seán Ó Riada. RTÉ documentary about musician and composer Seán Ó Riada.
Wrenboys
Просмотров 5 тыс.6 лет назад
From RTÉ's "Come West Along the Road". en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wren_Day
Hands: Powers of the Metal
Просмотров 164 тыс.6 лет назад
RTÉ documentary series exploring the craft traditions of Ireland. hands.ie/ A look at the work of the Power family in their metal foundry, New Ross, Co. Wexford. Filmed in 1989.
Designed in Kilkenny (1969)
Просмотров 7 тыс.6 лет назад
The Kilkenny Design Workshops. RTÉ 1969. Rebroadcast in 2002.
Late Late Show: Ancient Irish Horns
Просмотров 4,4 тыс.6 лет назад
From the Late Late Show with Gay Byrne, ~1998. More ancient instruments: ruclips.net/video/o0ExXOoXA8I/видео.html www.ancientmusicireland.com ruclips.net/user/ancientmusicireland
Hands: Irish Spinningwheel Making
Просмотров 132 тыс.6 лет назад
RTÉ documentary series exploring the craft traditions of Ireland. hands.ie/ James Shiels and his son Charlie of Carndonagh, Co. Donegal, make an Irish spinningwheel. The tradition continues in the family today: www.spinningwheels.ie/ irishspinningwheels/ Narrated by Benedict Kiely. Filmed in 1991.
Hands: Dublin's Workhorses
Просмотров 216 тыс.6 лет назад
RTÉ documentary series exploring the craft traditions of Ireland. hands.ie/ A look at the lives of some of the last of Dublin's working horses, and the associated trades - farrier, harness maker, etc. Locations include Moore Street & Smithfield markets. Narrated by Éamonn Mac Thomáis. Filmed in 1983.
Alan Whicker - The Skye Ferry
Просмотров 8 тыс.6 лет назад
Alan Whicker reports on the contention over plans to extend the ferry service between the Isle of Skye and the mainland to Sunday, still strictly observed as the Sabbath. First broadcast in 1964.
Patterns: The Basketmakers of Lough Nafooey
Просмотров 85 тыс.6 лет назад
Patterns: The Basketmakers of Lough Nafooey
Patterns: Danny Osborne - Birds in Porcelain
Просмотров 19 тыс.7 лет назад
Patterns: Danny Osborne - Birds in Porcelain
"Dive, dive!" Yelled the captain through the thing....
Просмотров 18 тыс.7 лет назад
"Dive, dive!" Yelled the captain through the thing....
Had me weeping for times gone and peoples past 💚
A work of ART!
How old is joe Duffy
I put the subtitles on, to say Google's having a hard time with it is an understatement.
AI 🥛 🥛 float Self-drive Only needs green Grass 😉😂🤣😂
Lovely, thsnk you
These people need subtitles
I worked on this flote when a kid , Dublin 7 . I was hung over many a tar barrel,memories ☘️
This guy deserves a show of his own, nothing like this joke
This is SO GREAT!!!!! 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Fuck the sign language.. Ruined the whole video..
I would love to do this
Huh. I learned how to throw pots in the early 90s, but a lot of the process was quite different, since that was an art studio. The clay was carefully mixed from powder and fine grog, and used relatively fresh. The kilns were smaller, indoors, and gas-fired (natural gas). The wheel throwing was only the quick first step, and pretty much nothing unglazed came out of the studio.
Peig smoked a pipe!
Hi Ipp
no closed caption !!!
No staring at cellphones in those days (like I'm doing now). Those people had rich lives. A real, authentic community, a sense of the past, and traditions. They did things for themselves, which really gives you a sense of well- being, instead of just being an anonymous consumer.
What’s that song called from the opening title?
It's called "Alice, Where Art Thou?".
im afraid tat Ireland long gone now
Gloves are for fkin pansies
It hurts knowing i will never be going back to feel and see the island 😢
betcha that is mulberry paper not rice paper
Listening to this as I have lived in London and sensed no depth or 'magic' in it. As I intend to stay, I want to find some interesting stuff in it. Mind you, I see museums and galleries but compared to the endearing charm of Yorkshire, that's not much. I need stories I suppose to like a place.
The best joke
Well tonight I’m probably going to dream about rats. 😒
Parabéns e obrigado por publicarem esse material, mostrando as técnicas e o legado dos antepassados e seus afazeres.😊
HILARIOUS!!!!
When the World was filled with craftmanship and bespoke pieces. Something you could treasure. Far too few of these things now.
That was so interesting to watch. I was surprised to see the basic bridle had the bit sewn in! Therefore changing the bit wasn't possible! I thought that odd as not all horses like or go well in the same sort of bit. A well made saddle is absolutely essential to the horse and rider. It must fit the horse well and be as comfy as an armchair for the rider. I enjoyed watching the saddlers using their tools with ease and precision. Beautiful work.
My farrier comes every 5 weeks and my horses love him. My son is a blacksmith not a farrier. My uncle was a blacksmith and a farrier. It's a common belief that all blacksmiths are farriers but they aren't. i love these films. Thank you.
I thoroughly enjoyed this documentary.
J'ai adoré ... des monuments ... et l'accent !
Fasinating documentary with a bit of poetic vibe :) Does anyone knows the history of that ghost?
I tried to find info, there is a company in the internet making Donegal Carpets but it's not the same anymore, right? I don't fully understand, is there still a factory in Killybegs working?
These documentaries are fascinating
I was watching your you tube I am from australia I use to be a farmers wife I was concerned that you could make it easier for yourselves with shearing meaning 1. races fences 2. shearing platforms in a shed with electricity then you could have a 3. electric shearing piece instead of the shearing clippers 4. A shearing platforms enable you to shear on wood to keep wool off the ground 5. have a wool shed employee to grab the fleece off the platform when the shearer has finished shearing the sheep 6. Then have a wool table to help the employee to sort and skirt the wool at waist height 7. Then have wool bale containers with wool bags set up ready for different wool classes And a wool press And Mrs spinning lady could have her own wool table to sort her wool fleece at waist height and do her spinning inside it’s very cold where you live I am not trying to tell you how to shear sheep but you can do it a lot easier it is a very hard job Hope you don’t mind kind regards Donna
incredible
I've been told, and subsequent research has shown, that my surname Millhollin is a variant of Mulholland. I can't help but wonder if somehow these hardworking folk are somehow "family." Whether they are or not, they have my utmost respect.
Pardon my American Slang. But rhese brothers & Sisters got mad skills! Love watching them work. Great video.
☘️☘️
Great to see wild salmon being caught, I don't know if there are any left after the greedy huge trawlers.
23:25 "Not enough young folks are interested in keeping bees"... I am glad to report that in 2024 beekeeping is once again a thriving hobby!
We can learn so much from these wise people.
where can we hear these recording?
I wish I’d known me then - what advice I’d have given!
Paddy Murphy. The irishest name ever.
My grandfather was born in 1886, 24km north west of Galway city. He spoke of the poverty and widespread of disease that today is near impossible to imagine. Entire families were gone in few days. He saw the Irish as being regarded as less than serfs by the English. Born without any right to be any higher role in life. And he was right. Nothing changed until independence. My other grandfather was born in 1912, so he saw and was involved in rebuilding the country after independence. He saw the potential and hard journey ahead. But most of all, he believed if the Irish to suffer that much and still be Irish in the end, they would strive and work to build a better future. He was proved right. It took 4 generations. But it worked. Galway today is a great city and Spanish influence still exists. It’s amazing to me still. Being from the county and having done my schooling in Galway to see it now.
Paris to the West of Ireland was equivalent to a Time Machine. A culture rented apart by oppressive overlords, engineered poverty and the aftershocks of a made man famine.
Your video clearly indicates you know very little about Saint Patrick.
"Yeah, said Dave."
This is very old language, little changed from very early middle English. It contains many sounds that have been lost to modern English: the 'ch' of the pronoun Ich; the gh sound of might; and so on. I am trying to work out whether it has, like modern English, taken part in the great vowel shift: I think not. Yola seems to have preserved both the masculine and feminine forms of the number two: Twa and Tu. Does it preserve gender forms of adjectives and nouns?