archival-exile.bsky.social
@archival-exile.bsky.social
Hello! I'm a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Postdoctoral Fellow studying early Irish emigration to Spain. You can follow my work on the voices of the diaspora through the records of the Irish College in Salamanca here plus GitHub: github.com/Archival-Exile
After a short posting hiatus, I'm very excited to share this CFP...

📢 Migration and the Early Modern Spanish Empire
📆 Conference dates: June 10–12, 2026
📝 Application deadline: December 19, 2025

Submissions very welcome from all #earlymodern disciplines — please do consider applying and sharing!
November 20, 2025 at 11:16 AM
What exactly did 100 ‘reales’ get newly trained students returning to Ireland in the 1600s? According to Cristina Bravo Lozano in Spain and the Irish Mission: sea passage, liturgical books, and civilian clothing to hide from hostile English authorities (80).

#SkyStorians #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
October 15, 2025 at 10:33 AM
How much were migrants given to return home on the Irish Mission? In a letter from 1642, a rector requests 100 reales for two newly trained students [‘a cada qual ciento’] who he described as virtuous and good-natured [‘gente virtuosa y sonrrada’].

#Archives #Skystorians #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
October 13, 2025 at 10:13 AM
Looking back on my own recent travels as I read more about early modern migrants who made their way back to Ireland, and I can see why Malin Head was picked as a Star Wars filming spot. Still struck by the mood of the sea even on a quiet drizzly day…

#Films #Coast #Travel #Nature #Ireland #StarWars
October 10, 2025 at 10:41 AM
Many Irish migrants answered the call to return from Iberia and promote Catholicism in Ireland. From the early 1600s, as Cristina Bravo Lozano details in Spain and the Irish Mission, over a thousand clergy applied for travel funds to this end [‘viatica’].

#SkyStorians #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
October 8, 2025 at 9:44 AM
What exactly was the religious work of Irish migrants in Iberia? According to a
papal note from 1623, they were training for the Irish Mission [‘missionis in
Hiberniam’] — a duty to return home and preach Catholicism amid expanding
Protestant rule.

#Archives #Skystorians #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
October 6, 2025 at 9:44 AM
Grateful for a fascinating trip up to Donegal! Especially interesting to learn about Sir Cahir O'Doherty — last Gaelic lord of Inishowen and English ally-turned-rebel from the early 1600s — after this epic view of Carrickabraghy Castle.

#Castles #Coasts #Skystorians #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
October 3, 2025 at 11:00 AM
Irish migrants used Spanish to reject English stereotypes in the 1610s. When English edicts called them a pestilence in the land [‘pestilencia de la tierra’], the Irish took pride in the incredible fruits of their religious work [‘increible fruto’].

#Archives #Skystorians #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
October 1, 2025 at 10:28 AM
Even high-ranking English leaders made the Irish-Moor-Morisco connection. As Barbara Fuchs notes in ‘Spanish Lessons’, Sir Arthur Chichester linked ‘desperate and rebellious courses’ with the ‘white [O’]Moores’ and the elided Celtic ‘O’ in a 1609 report (50).

#Skystorians #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
September 29, 2025 at 12:01 PM
Can’t resist a last summer photo after spotting these lovely flowers in north Dublin… The sun is offering some clarity as I think through more surprising Irish (dis)connections with groups like the Moriscos, i.e., Muslim-Christian converts in Iberia.

#Nature #AmReading #EarlyModern #BloomScrolling
September 26, 2025 at 8:11 AM
Irish refugees may have felt pressure to define themselves against Muslim-Christian converts in Iberia. As Ciaran O’Scea writes in Surviving Kinsale, English writers linked them via slurs — ‘barbarousness, and brutishness’ — to justify persecution (212).

#Skystorians #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
September 24, 2025 at 3:04 PM
Early Irish migrants sometimes defined themselves against other persecuted groups. In 1610, an altar marked one college's founding as the year Muslim-Christian converts were expelled from Iberia as so-called enemies of the faith [‘enemigos de la fe’].

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
September 22, 2025 at 10:01 AM
More happy Friday flowers! Taking a bit of a break from Irish materials today to prep for teaching, especially excited about some multilingual medieval ‘jarchas’ and ‘moaxajas’ in Arabic, Hebrew, and the first traces of Romance languages in Iberia…

#Lit #Nature #Medieval #AmReading #BloomScrolling
September 12, 2025 at 9:03 AM
Efforts to fight corruption and protect the persecuted weren’t always rewarded. In 1659, for example, the Inquisition dealt a death blow to the former Irish-Iberian student Lamport — a “tragically unsurprising” fate according to O’Connor’s book (115).

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
September 10, 2025 at 3:12 PM
Some practiced ideals taught in Irish-Iberian colleges. As Thomas O’Connor writes in Irish Voices from the Spanish Inquisition, former student William Lamport defended Jewish-Christian converts and drafted plans for “the liberation of slaves” (105–8).

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
September 8, 2025 at 2:21 PM
Great to be back in Ireland and catching the last bits of summer! Sending these lovely flowers I spotted into the world for the weekend as I mull over my archival finds from the months away.

#Nature #Walking #Dublin #LoveIrishResearch

p.s. Anyone know their name? (Seems to be some kind of rose?)
September 5, 2025 at 2:11 PM
Early Irish exiles also learned to treat strangers as friends and friends as strangers in Iberia. That way, says one manual, friends would return to the faith and strangers wouldn’t leave it [“para que estos se le buevan, y aquellos no se le vayan”].

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
September 4, 2025 at 11:06 AM
Early Irish exiles were taught a wide range of approaches to the world in their new Iberian colleges. In a book by Luis de León from 1603, for instance, the author highlights that one cannot live without loving: “no se puede vivir sin amar”.

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
September 2, 2025 at 11:08 AM
For now, summer research wrapped! Looking forward to my first proper vacation in a long time, but one last find before I go... always thought medievalists had the best animal illustrations, but I love this dog who is just not having any of the epic drama here.

#Art #Engraving #Archives #EarlyModern
August 1, 2025 at 8:03 AM
Early Irish-Iberian students also met other communities facing exile. From encounters with moriscos (Muslim converts to Christianity) to conversos (Jewish converts to Christianity), more to come on intersections with purity laws and the Inquisition…

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
July 29, 2025 at 7:38 AM
Irish-Iberian migrants did meet strong everyday women. Despite silence in early college records, traces surface in property notes (“la dicha Doña Elvira”), legal debts (41,854 maravedís to Antonia de Céspedes), and printed books (by Antonia Ramírez).

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
July 28, 2025 at 4:04 PM
Going to miss running here! Such a good spot to think through all the reading lately... For my last full week with the early Irish-Iberian migrant book collection: Saint Patrick stories, Middle Eastern pilgrimages, and semi-censored Spanish miscellanea.

#Run #BookSky #AmReading #Nature #Salamanca
July 25, 2025 at 7:17 AM
The first Irish-Iberian college book collection echoes gender views in its manuscripts. Some texts praise Biblical women with epic visions of their virtues, while others, like the 1603 treatise on “The Perfect Wife”, stress silence for everyday women.

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
July 24, 2025 at 6:59 AM
Female figures don’t always hold power in Irish-Iberian archives. Some texts show strong visions of Mary, but others exclude women from certain Irish waters and even warn of death upon entry: “… una que tuvo atrevimiento de tentarlo se avia ahogado…”

#Migration #Archives #EarlyModern #IrishHistory
July 22, 2025 at 6:47 AM
Morning view from the University of Salamanca’s reading room. Grateful for a cool breeze after the heat wave as I dive into books owned by the first Irish-Iberian college exiles, including Marian devotions, Japanese geographies, and Greek tragedies.

#Art #Architecture #BookSky #AmReading #Salamanca
July 18, 2025 at 8:12 AM