Archive for January, 2010

January 21 1535 AD: Liz’s Essex Boy Crushes Irish

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Queen Elizabeth The First of England sends The Earl Of Essex to quell the rebellious Irish. The Earl does well and after only two weeks of concerted violence on the part of his trusty yeomen, London is back in the hands of the English. But for how long?

January 20 1962 AD: Gyration Ban Lifted

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

In an attempt to show a kinder more modern face, the Catholic Church in Ireland appoints a Papal Envoy With Responsibility for Gyration In Moderation. Msgnr. Carlo Luccia preaches in Carlow and admits that there is nothing in the Bible about sexy dancing one way or the other. Sales of The Bible plummet and booksellers are plagued with requests of copies of What Is Sexy Dancing?.

Sorry Recession, You’re Back On Hold, TDs Return From Hols!

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

The Cabinet is to meet later today to discuss what everyone got for Christmas, and the terms of an inquiry into the banking crisis.

Last night acting-Taoiseach Brian Cowen and failed hippie John Gormless met for nearly an hour in Government Buildings to discuss their presents. Mr Cowen was tight lipped about his haul of Christmas gifts but this may be because he is known to have received “tasty looking glue”. It is believed that Mr Gormless got Little Big Planet for Wii but that he has as yet been unable to load it onto his Texas Instruments Speak & Spell Read more »

January 19 1914 AD:The Village That Fought The Kaiser

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

Enraged by the Kaiser’s expansionist policies in Europe the entire Wicklow village of Crossderrig enlists in the British Army. Only one of them passes the medical, achieving a grade “A-1″. He fought heroically in the dreadful mud and stinking wretchedness and also distinguished himself when he left Crossderrig to fight in France. Three others achieve the grade “moribund”, another two are assessed as “odd looking to an injurious degree” and the remaining thirteen are forced to return home having only been awarded certificates stating: “These men are a dozen sheep and a hen”.

January 18 1485 AD: Great Wall Of Athlone

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Warren FitzWarren-O’Toole builds The Great Wall Of Athlone. For many years it is credited with keeping out the invading Mongol hordes, despite being constructed partly of matted dog fur and partly if gaping holes. Only in the early 1950s with the advent of widely available cheap atlases is it generally conceded that geographical good fortune rather than FitzWarren’s edifice has been responsible in large part for the absence from the Athlone high street of pubs and dairies named “Old Mother Khan’s”.

January 17 1939 AD: Neutrality Dividend

Sunday, January 17th, 2010

With war clouds gathering over Europe, Eamon de Valera and his men make far-reaching decisions which will affect the quality of gummed stationery in Ireland to this day.

January 16 1920 AD: Tans Thwarted

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

Plans by the hated Black and Tans to gun down the entire crowd and all players at a Hurling match in Nenagh are thwarted by Republican freedom fighters who blow up the tanning salon, forcing the British militia to take a long holiday in Majorca before they can comply with uniform regulations.

January 15 1842 AD: Reverse Eviction Of Martin O’Toole

Friday, January 15th, 2010

A spate of bizarre agrarian violence takes place as the result of Mad Martin O’Toole evicting himself from his own hovel on a large estate. The landlord, Quentin Ffoulkes, attempts to forcibly place him back in the cottage, saying he will catch his death in the cool breeze and attendant showers. However O’Toole refuses to yield and Ffoulkes is forced to burn down the rest of the estate leaving only O’Toole’s cottage standing and forcing him to get indoors.

January 14 1043 AD: Danes Out Movement

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

A group of Clontarf residents, frustrated with increasingly high rates of pillaging in the area which is bringing the price of Hovels down, forms a “Danes Out” movement. Their first efforts consist mostly of booby-trapping gold ornaments and monks – a costly and ineffective approach. However within a year these small skirmishes develop into a full pitched battle in Clontarf led by the most militant estate agent Ireland has ever known, Brian Ború. If you listen carefully when the wind whips across Clontarf into the Irish sea it is said you can still hear their battle cry to this very day: “There goes the neighbourhood, ye filthy horn-hatted feckers!!!”

January 13 1966 AD: Near Miss For Nelson’s Pillar

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Penultimate unsuccessful IRA plot to detonate 1000lbs of gelignite under Nelson Pillar in Dublin’s O’Connell Street – the plan fails when an IRA unit unfamiliar with the capital’s geography is pressed into service in pitch darkness at dead of night. The resultant explosion fells three trees in St Anne’s Park in leafy coastal Clontarf, killing eight pigeons and a woodcock. Naturalists condemn the outrage. In London, the Queen and her government feel cosy and safe, but for how long?