columnistsClodagh Finn: The Irish tennis ace you've probably never heard ofAs one of the world’s most famous tournaments draws to a close today, meet this one-time finalist and greatly overlooked tennis great
munster'The War of Independence in East Cork' is the story of conflict in one of Ireland's bloodiest eras
S 1984 Revisited: Ford's was so rooted in Cork that its closure was unthinkable1984 was a seminal year in Ireland. Forty years on, our writers look back at some of the scandals and stories that made the headlines and helped shape the Ireland of today
Sarah Harte: The GPO deserves more than offices and retail — it needs cultural investmentTurning the GPO into shops and offices isn’t progress — it’s a sign of cultural insecurity. We owe our history better than that
S Mick Clifford: MacSwiney’s legacy is being stolen by Sinn Féin Next Sunday, Terence MacSwiney’s grave is set to be robbed in the name of rewriting history. The graverobbing will be metaphoric but is worthy of comment.
'The War of Independence in East Cork' is the story of conflict in one of Ireland's bloodiest erasTom O’Neill and Eugene Power from Midleton and Paul Busteed from Cobh have compiled what may be the most extensive history of the era in East Cork
‘It meant so much to him’: Shane MacGowan’s wife on the hunt for his missing Easter Rising rifle
Historian names IRA mole who revealed location of Cork mayor Tomás Mac Curtain's killerMichael Collins sought revenge for Mac Curtain's murder, using his spies in the RIC to find the RIC detective who had led the assassination, eminent historian Jim Herlihy says
Clodagh Finn: Mother’s Day Gaza vigil highlights Irish discomfort with female protest and dissentThe treatment of Gaza protesters outside the Dáil shows how female dissent is still met with disproportionate force
BBC claims it had 'multiple credible sources' for Gerry Adams allegationGerry Adams claims the 'Spotlight' programme and a related BBC article defamed him by falsely accusing him of sanctioning the Provisional IRA’s killing of British agent Denis Donaldson
How the dissolution 100 years ago of Cork Corporation led to our local government system todayThe country’s first City Manager was appointed in Cork in 1929 and effectively saw the sharing of power between the manager and the elected council
The Changemakers: The woman who took on the State – and won access to contraception for allWhen Customs officials seized the spermicidal jelly mother-of-four May McGee had ordered from the UK on the advice of a doctor, she was livid and took action that led to lasting change, writes Clodagh Finn
Martin criticises 'over-reaction' as Cathal Crowe apologises for remarks about British ArmyTaoiseach called for perspective, saying we don't need lessons in terms of the British state's responsibility for 'Bloody Sunday, Ballymurphy, and much, much more'