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An unguarded view of Victorian Ireland’s archaeological imagination. Scholars and amateurs will delight. Volume III (1860-61) of The Journal of the Kilkenny and South-East of Ireland Archaeological Society stands among the essential Irish archaeological journal titles of its era, a historical society collection that presents nineteenth century archaeology at ground level. Drawn from society proceedings, field notices and antiquarian observation, the volume supplies material vital to medieval Ireland studies and preserves accounts of ancient Irish artefacts, placenames and local customs useful for local history research and as a genealogy resource for Ireland. It functions both as an academic reference book and as a Celtic studies compendium, marrying specialist detail with the curious regional colour that invites general readers. Even where language and measure reflect Victorian priorities, the observations are a direct witness to the questions local scholars posed, the methods they used and the concerns that animated antiquarian interests across county and parish. For students of method as well as lovers of place, the journal is a compact archive of how nineteenth-century communities encountered their own past.As a contemporary record, it illuminates the methods and preoccupations of antiquarian interests in southeast Ireland, contributing to southeast Ireland history and the broader Victorian era Ireland intellectual scene, offering scholars a primary window into how local scholarship described and conserved the past. Archivists and historians rely on such volumes to trace the evolution of field practice and the shifting priorities of regional study; family historians and those using a genealogy resource for Ireland will find parish-level leads and context often absent from later summaries. Casual readers discovering regional story and texture will find accessible, often vivid accounts, while classic-literature collectors and institutional libraries will value the volume for its provenance and enduring research utility. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today’s and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector’s item and a cultural treasure. Whether assembled on a reference shelf, consulted for local history research or enjoyed by a reader drawn to Ireland’s past, this edition reconnects modern audiences with the nineteenth-century conversations that shaped Celtic studies.