Queer Georgians: A Hidden History of Lovers, Lawbreakers and Homemakers

Wood Quay Venue, Wednesday 24th June

This lecture uncovers the queer lives hidden (and not so hidden) across Georgian Britain and Ireland, from devoted lovers and unconventional households to figures who quietly defied the rules of their age. Central to the story are the Ladies of Llangollen (or the Ladies from Kilkenny), whose Irish history offers a vivid way into a world of domesticity, intimacy, friendship, and chosen family. Moving beyond scandal and secrecy, the talk reveals a Georgian past that was far more diverse, daring, and emotionally rich than we are often led to believe.

ISL interpretation will be provided. This talk will be recorded and uploaded to Dublin City Heritage on YouTube.

This talk forms part of the Oak Room Heritage Talk Series, created by Dublin City Council's Heritage Office as an action of the Dublin City Strategic Heritage Plan 2024-2029. It is part-funded by the Heritage Council. Email [email protected] with any queries.


Date:
Wednesday 24th June
Time:
6.00pm
Price:
Free
Address:
The Wood Quay Venue, Fishamble Street, Wood Quay, Dublin 8, Ireland

Google Map of The Wood Quay Venue, Fishamble Street, Wood Quay, Dublin 8, Ireland

You might also like...

What's on

One Dublin One Book

Dublin

Christine Falls by John Banville is the One Dublin One Book choice for 2026, following on from Dublin Written in Our Hearts, an anthology, chosen for 2025. One Dublin One Book aims to encourage everyone in Dublin to read a designated book connected with the capital city during the month of April every year. This annual project is a Dublin City Council initiative, led by Dublin City Libraries and Dublin UNESCO City of Literature, which encourages reading for pleasure. The author introduces us to the maverick pathologist Quirke whose only passion is finding truth in science. While readers

What's on

Manuals of Immorality: Censoring publications in twentieth-century Ireland

Wood Quay Venue

The scale and ambition of the Irish censorship regime is preserved in a blacklist of over 12,000 publications. From 1930 to 2016, the censorship board banned all manner of printed material. Sex education manuals, pulp fiction, nineteenth-century pornography, celebrity memoirs, and newspapers and magazines appear alongside literature from the greatest twentieth-century writers. This state censorship emerged from the report of the Committee on Evil Literature (1926), which gathered opinions from churchmen of all persuasions, newsagents, charities, trade unions and civil servants. The moral attit

What's on

Remembering Brendan Kennelly – In Treasured Moments

Round Room at the Mansion House

In the majestic surroundings of the Round Room at the Mansion House in Dublin, acclaimed performer Noel O’Grady presents a moving and celebratory one-man show honouring his great friend, the legendary Irish poet Brendan Kennelly, on the 90th anniversary of his birth. This intimate and richly layered performance is both tribute and remembrance, a heartfelt portrait of a giant of Irish literature told through personal stories, rare recordings, powerful recitals and song. O’Grady, who knew Kennelly personally, weaves together vivid anecdotes of the man behind the poems: his generosity of s