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  1. DOUGLAS HYDE. 186o-1949. BY GERARD MURPHY. Professor of the History of Celtic Literature, University College, Dublin. THOSE thought who of did him not as know a great Douglas man. And Hyde they intimately are right. have Those. knew him intimately loved him, but in his lifetime they tended at his weaknesses rather than to admire his greatness.

  2. The Douglas Hyde Gallery of Contemporary Art. Trinity College Dublin. Dublin 2 D02 PN40. Ireland. Telephone: +353 (0)1 896 1116. Email: thedouglashyde@tcd.ie. For general enquiries email us! Office Opening Hours: Monday to Friday, 10am to 6pm.

  3. The Douglas Hyde has gained worldwide recognition in platforming new and diverse perspectives in contemporary art. In supporting us you are enabling artists to make their most ambitious work to date and helping to bring that work to new audiences. The Douglas Hyde Gallery of Contemporary Art is open Wednesday to Saturday and is always free.

  4. Word of Douglas Hyde's death created the need for the new Irish nation to introduce a new tradition, a ceremonial mourning for a former head of state. Telegrams and cables, notes of condolence, official messages of sympathy from Europe and North America, and personal notes from all over the world from women and men whose lives he had touched poured into Little Ratra.

  5. 378 Douglas Hyde and the Exigencies of Publication * Douglas Hyde, 'Songs of the Connacht Bards — Fourth Chapter', Weekly Freeman, 18 May 1892, Hyde, Love Songs of Connacht, p. v. An arrangement mentioned in Hyde's diary as part of his 'Review of 1891'; see Daly, Young Douglas Hyde,p. 13.

  6. Douglas Hyde was succeeded by the League's co-founder Eoin MacNeill. 8. Douglas Hyde had no association with Sinn Fein and the independence movement. 9. Douglas Hyde was elected to Seanad Eireann, the upper house of the Irish Free State's Oireachtas, at a by-election on 4 February 1925, replacing Sir Hutcheson Poe.

  7. 25 de jun. de 2018 · In 1938, the choice of Douglas Hyde as Ireland's first president underpinned "Irish ideals and native culture rather than the ranting, bellicose nationalism so prevalent on the Continent".