How the Irish Language Finds Connection in the Dark: Samhain and Uaigneas
Release Date: 11/05/2025
Undercover Irish
How Irish migrants shaped hockey, club names, and identity from Montreal through Toronto to Vancouver đźđȘ Episode Overview In this episode of Undercover Irish, we explore how Irish identity travelled across the Atlanticâand how it evolved through sport in Canada. From famine-era migration to the rise of hockey, from the Montreal Shamrocks to the Toronto St. Patricks (and eventually the Maple Leafs), and all the way to Vancouverâs modern Whitecaps and Greencaps, this is a story of identity, adaptation, and belonging. đ§ What Youâll Learn How An Gorta MĂłr (1845â1852) shaped...
info_outlineUndercover Irish
đïž London Irish, Boston Celtics & the Names We Carry In this episode of Undercover Irish, we follow a simple questionâwhatâs in a name?âand uncover a global story of identity, memory, and survival. From the fields of Ireland to the streets of London and the arenas of Boston, this episode explores how Irish identity has been carried, rebuilt, and reimagined through the names of sporting clubs and institutions. We begin at home, with unusual GAA club names like the Four Masters, Cashel King Cormacâs, and the Geraldinesânames that preserve history, assert legitimacy, and...
info_outlineUndercover Irish
â Enjoying the podcast? If youâre liking Undercover Irish, please take a moment to leave a review on your podcast appâit really helps more people find the show and supports independent Irish storytelling. đ§ Episode Overview Why is the town of Buttevant called Buttevant? In this episode, we uncover the story behind one of Irelandâs most unusual place namesâtracing its origins from the Irish Cill na Mullach (âthe church of the hilltopsâ) to the Norman French Boutez en avant (âpush forwardâ). But this isnât just a story about a name. Itâs a story about how language,...
info_outlineUndercover Irish
đïž Show Notes LINK TO POEM https://www.patreon.com/posts/155883354?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_fan&utm_content=web_share Cork vs Tipperary 1741 â The First Match Report Was A Poem in Irish This Sunday, Cork and Tipperary meet again. But their rivalry goes back much further than modern hurling. In 1741, one of the earliest recorded clashes between the two was capturedânot in a newspaper, not in Englishâbut in a poem, written in Irish. In this episode of Undercover Irish, we explore that poem as one of the first âmatch reportsâ...
info_outlineUndercover Irish
đïž Show Notes In this episode of Undercover Irish, we explore how the Great Famine didnât just reshape Irelandâit carried Irish identity across the world. From the streets of Liverpool to the foundations of clubs like Celtic F.C. and Hibernian F.C., we look at how Irish communities used sport to rebuild identity in exile. We examine how club names reflected memory, resistance, and belongingâand how the Irish diaspora left a lasting mark on global sport. đ In this episode: The impact of the Great Hunger on Irish migration Why Liverpool became a centre of Irish life abroad The...
info_outlineUndercover Irish
đ Get Early Access to the Next One Listen to Episodes 2 of this mini series now on Patreon: đ https://www.patreon.com/posts/how-great-hunger-155619855?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link In this episode of Undercover Irish, we explore the hidden meaning behind GAA club namesâand what they reveal about Irish identity, history, and mythology. From rebels and outlaws to legendary heroes like CĂș Chulainn, we uncover how names carry memory, culture, and meaning across generations. Because in Ireland⊠a name is...
info_outlineUndercover Irish
đïž Show Notes The Mountains of Pomeroy: A Love Song from a Broken Land At first listen, The Mountains of Pomeroy sounds like a simple love song â a quiet story of two people divided by circumstance. But beneath the romance lies something deeper. In this episode of Undercover Irish, we explore the world behind the song: The rapparees, outlaws shaped by dispossession and colonisation The story of Shane Bernagh, a real figure who moved through the same Ulster landscape The role of George Sigerson and the Gaelic Revival in reshaping Irish identity And how poets like John Montague help us...
info_outlineUndercover Irish
đïž How One Townâs Four Names Map Different Irelands đ Charleville isnât just one name. Itâs also An RĂĄth, Rathgogan, and Rathluirc â each one telling a different story about Ireland. In this episode, we follow those names through conquest, plantation, and revival, to see how one place can hold multiple pasts at once. đ§ Support the Podcast If youâre enjoying Undercover Irish, you can support the podcast here: đ
info_outlineUndercover Irish
The Story Behind ĂrĂł, SĂ© do Bheatha âBhaile: From Jacobite Song to 1916 Rebel Anthem One of the most famous Irish rebel songs, ĂrĂł, SĂ© do Bheatha 'Bhaile, is closely associated with the Easter Rising and the revolutionary poetry of PĂĄdraig Pearse. But the story of the song actually begins centuries earlier. In this episode of Undercover Irish, we explore how one melody travelled through three different political movements, transforming from a Jacobite welcome song into one of the best-known Irish rebel anthems. Originally, the song celebrated Charles Edward Stuart, known in Irish as...
info_outlineUndercover Irish
đïž Why Britain Still Owns Part of Cyprus â And What Ireland Has To Do With It When Cyprus appears in the headlines during a Middle East/West Asia war, most people ask: Why is Britain operating from there? The answer begins long before todayâs conflict â and it doesnât begin in Cyprus. It begins in Ireland. In this episode, we explore how Irelandâs partition and the retention of the Treaty Ports in 1921 reveal a broader imperial strategy â one that reappears in Cyprus in 1960, when Britain granted independence but retained sovereign military bases at Akrotiri and Dhekelia. This...
info_outlineđ§ How the Irish Language Finds Connection in the Dark: Samhain and Uaigneas
When the Irish speak of loneliness, they donât just name a feeling â they map it. This episode explores uaigneas, Samhain, and how the Irish language finds connection even in the dark.
Show Notes
As the fires of Samhain fade and the year exhales, the world feels still â that quiet pause between life and death, light and dark. In Irish, this season is MĂ na Samhna, a time to honour the dead, light candles, and remember what connects us.
But itâs also the season of uaigneas â a word that means far more than loneliness. Uaigneas carries echoes of uaigh (the grave) and uaim (from me), reminding us that even in absence, thereâs relationship â even in darkness, connection.
In this episode of Undercover Irish, we trace the emotional geography of uaigneas:
how Irish turns loss into language, and why even in the season of endings, the language itself keeps a light alive.
Weâll connect this moment of stillness to ideas weâve explored before â the body and the land in The Body of Ireland and the art of finding calm and purpose in The Stoics and the Irish.
Each of these threads comes together here, at Samhain â a time when language, memory, and meaning meet in the dark to remind us that weâre never fully alone.
đ Support the Podcast
If you enjoy Undercover Irish and want to help keep it going, you can support the show on Patreon:
đ patreon.com/undercoverirish
đ± Connect with Us
Follow Undercover Irish on Instagram for visuals, clips, and Irish-language insights from each episode:
đ instagram.com/undercoverirish
Share the episode, tag us, and tell us what uaigneas means to you.
đïž About the Show
Undercover Irish is a podcast about Irelandâs hidden curriculum â the lessons tucked into our songs, stories, and everyday words. Hosted by Eolan, it explores how language, history, and culture reveal who we are and how we connect.
Wherever you are in the world â bĂ ag Ă©isteacht.
Rediscover the Ireland thatâs been here all along, in our words, our memories, and our music.