The next lecture to the Thomond Archaeological and Historical Society is ‘Museums as Community Resources’, and will be given by Mr Tony Candon, who is a Kilkenny man and Keeper of Irish Folklife in the National Museum of Ireland. He is also Manager of NMI’s Museum of Country Life-Ireland’s National Folk Museum in Turlough Park, Castlebar, Co. Mayo. Tony has spent his working life studying, thinking about and interpreting Ireland’s heritage across a number of disciplines. Aspiring to be a historian of medieval Ireland, economic necessity (and interest) forced him into work as an archaeologist in Cos. Cork and Tipperary. From there he moved to Co. Tyrone where he built and ran The Ulster History Park, an open-air archaeological theme park near Omagh. Later, he became the Curator of the four museums of Derry’s Heritage and Museum Service. Tony joined the National Museum of Ireland in March 2007 and there he still is…
The venue for this lecture is Room T.1.17 Tara Building, Mary Immaculate College, South Circular Road, Limerick at 8.00pm on Monday 25 March 2019.
What are museums for? Museums started out as “cabinets of curiosities”, eclectic collections of objects gathered by wealthy men for their own delectation and that of their friends. Over time, these collections gradually evolved through different mechanisms into public museums, designed to contribute to the education of the masses that they might improve themselves. In them, knowledgeable curators dispensed information about the objects they displayed: museums more or less told you what to think, more often than not in a condescending manner. In the late 20th and the early 21st centuries, museums have been evolving from that severe, formal instructional and didactic role. Now, they strive to be less remote Institutions talking down to their audiences and more engaged with the communities they serve. How does the National Museum of Ireland – Country Life do this?
On Wednesday 20 February 2019 at 7.00pm in the Granary Library, the Deputy Mayor of Limerick City and County, launched a major new digital history resource, which is the work of the Thomond Archaeological and Historical Society and Limerick Library. The Society was more than delighted to make available the entire back catalogue of their journal, the ‘North Munster Antiquarian Journal’ on the limerick.ie website. This constitutes a new free, on line source of more than 10,000 pages of history and archaeological writing, mainly focussed on Limerick, Clare and North Tipperary. this of course will add further to the unrivalled quantity of material made available on line by Limerick Archives, Limerick Museum and the local studies department of Limerick Library.