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Kiernan was the only son of Dr Thomas Joseph Kiernan, Irish diplomat and academic,<ref>
Kiernan was the only son of Dr Thomas Joseph Kiernan, Irish diplomat and academic,<ref>
Kiernan, T. J., "Transportation from Ireland to Sydney, 1791-1816", Canberra : 1954.</ref><ref>Kiernan, T. J., "The Irish exiles in Australia", Burns & Oates, Melbourne : 1954.</ref>
Kiernan, T. J., "Transportation from Ireland to Sydney, 1791-1816", Canberra : 1954.</ref><ref>Kiernan, T. J., "The Irish exiles in Australia", Burns & Oates, Melbourne : 1954.</ref>
<ref>Kiernan, T. J., "The white hound of the mountain, and other Irish folk tales", Devin-Adair Co., 1962.</ref> and the Irish ballad singer [[Delia Murphy]]<ref>O'Hara, Aidan (1997). I'll live till I die: Drumlin Publications. Leitrim: ISBN 1 873 43717 X.</ref>. He received a classical education at boarding school in Clongowes, Ireland, the school which James Joyce describes in his writing “A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man”. During this time, his father was posted to be the Irish Ambassador to the Vatican <ref>Kiernan, T. J., "Pope Pius XII", with an introd. by Fulton Sheen, Clonmore & Reynolds, Dublin : 1958.</ref> and his family was presented to the Pope. It was a grand occasion, and his parents and three sisters were photographed for the local newspapers. Kiernan used to say the only thing he remembered from that occasion was that he was allowed to play on the Pope’s golden telephone. He was a strong believer in Catholicism, and having been educated by the Jesuits, he fully understood the Church laws and decrees. His faith was more an intellectual spiritual belief than a practical religiosity, but it was a very deep commitment from which he never wavered. He used to say that in boarding school he had attended enough Masses to last him the rest of his life <ref>*[http://www.smh.com.au/national/obituaries/irish-scholar-loved-an-argument-and-flourished-in-australia-20100415-shhd.html "Irish scholar loved an argument and flourished in Australia:] in ''The Sydney Morning Herald''smh.com.au. 16 April 2010. retrieved 23 April 2010.</ref>.
<ref>Kiernan, T. J., "The white hound of the mountain, and other Irish folk tales", Devin-Adair Co., 1962.</ref> and the Irish ballad singer [[Delia Murphy]]<ref>O'Hara, Aidan (1997). I'll live till I die: Drumlin Publications. Leitrim: ISBN 1 873 43717 X.</ref>. He received a classical education at boarding school in Clongowes, Ireland, the school which James Joyce describes in his writing “A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man”. During this time, his father was posted to be the Irish Ambassador to the Vatican <ref>Kiernan, T. J., "Pope Pius XII", with an introd. by Fulton Sheen, Clonmore & Reynolds, Dublin : 1958.</ref> and his family was presented to the Pope. It was a grand occasion, and his parents and three sisters were photographed for the local newspapers. Kiernan used to say the only thing he remembered from that occasion was that he was allowed to play on the Pope’s golden telephone. He was a strong believer in Catholicism, and having been educated by the Jesuits, he fully understood the Church laws and decrees. His faith was more an intellectual spiritual belief than a practical religiosity, but it was a very deep commitment from which he never wavered. He used to say that in boarding school he had attended enough Masses to last him the rest of his life <ref>[http://www.smh.com.au/national/obituaries/irish-scholar-loved-an-argument-and-flourished-in-australia-20100415-shhd.html "Irish scholar loved an argument and flourished in Australia:] in ''The Sydney Morning Herald''. smh.com.au. 16 April 2010. retrieved 23 April 2010.</ref>.


== Poem ==
== Poem ==

Revision as of 23:30, 22 April 2010

Colm Kiernan
Resting placeLakeside Memorial Park, Kanahooka
OccupationHistorian, writer
EducationBA, MA (Melb)
BA, MA (Cantab)
PhD (UNSW)

Colm Padraic Kiernan (24 November 1931– 27 March 2010) was an historian and writer.

Historian

In 1964 Colm Kiernan was appointed foundation Lecturer in History at the University of Wollongong, Australia.[1] There began a long and successful career as an academic and researcher in both European and Australian History, which encompassed his writing of two volumes of Science and the Enlightenment of 18th Century France, the biographies of Arthur Calwell [2] and Archbishop Daniel Mannix, and his last book, Australia and Ireland – Bicentenary Essays 1788-1988.[3]

Irish background

Kiernan was the only son of Dr Thomas Joseph Kiernan, Irish diplomat and academic,[4][5] [6] and the Irish ballad singer Delia Murphy[7]. He received a classical education at boarding school in Clongowes, Ireland, the school which James Joyce describes in his writing “A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man”. During this time, his father was posted to be the Irish Ambassador to the Vatican [8] and his family was presented to the Pope. It was a grand occasion, and his parents and three sisters were photographed for the local newspapers. Kiernan used to say the only thing he remembered from that occasion was that he was allowed to play on the Pope’s golden telephone. He was a strong believer in Catholicism, and having been educated by the Jesuits, he fully understood the Church laws and decrees. His faith was more an intellectual spiritual belief than a practical religiosity, but it was a very deep commitment from which he never wavered. He used to say that in boarding school he had attended enough Masses to last him the rest of his life [9].

Poem

The Irish poet Daniel Kelleher wrote this poem for Colm Kiernan to mark his christening. It was read at his funeral.[10]

For CK at his Christening
We wish to the new child,
A heart that can be beguiled,
By a flower,
That the wind lifts,
As it passes.
If the storms break for him,
May the trees shake for him,
Their blossoms down.
In the night that he is troubled,
May a friend wake for him,
So that his time be doubled,
And at the end of all loving and love
May the Man above,
Give him a crown.

When he was the Irish Ambassador to the United States, T. J. Kiernan recited this poem to the parents of John F. Kennedy, Jr. soon after he was born in 1960. It was recited again by Senator Ted Kennedy to mark the death of John Jr. in 1999.[11]

Irish Australian

When his father was appointed as the first Irish Ambassador to Australia, in 1946, Kiernan finished his schooling at St Patrick's College, Goulburn. After completing his BA and MA at the University of Melbourne, he married Joan Louise McKay (1935–1992) on August 24, 1954, at St Christopher’s Church in Manuka, A.C.T. They traveled to Cambridge, England, where Kiernan converted his degrees to a BA, MA (Cantab). Their first child was born in Cambridge, their second in Dublin, Ireland, and the third in Wollongong. Kiernan was the first PhD completion in the Arts Faculty for the University of New South Wales, Kensington.

While appointed Professor of Australian History at University College Dublin in Ireland, Kiernan researched the Irish background of many Australian political and historical figures including Henry Handel Richardson and Peter Lalor. He was well versed in Irish, Gaelic, Celtic, Latin, and old English and could translate many very difficult texts including those written by the Bronte sisters, also of Irish descent, particularly Charlotte, who wrote in a mixture of Gaelic and old English.

He spoke fluent Italian, Spanish, and French, loved language, literature, and poetry, and was passionate about all things Irish Australian. He married Susan Margaret Mayer, his second wife, on June 11, 1994. They had a son. Kiernan is survived by his wife Susan, his four children and nine grandchildren.

Bibliography

  • The enlightenment and science in eighteenth-century France (1973)
  • Calwell : a personal and political biography (1978) ISBN 0170051854
  • Ireland and Australia (1984) ISBN 0207150087
  • Daniel Mannix and Ireland (1984) ISBN 0949681148
  • Australia and Ireland, 1788-1988 : bicentenary essays (1986) ISBN 0717114740
  • The Irish in the Labor movement (1991) ISBN 0730591557

References

  1. ^ "History of Wollongong" (PDF). University of Wollongong Campus News. 30 November 1979. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  2. ^ Henderson, Gerard (25 March 2003). "Labor's lesson to learn". smh.com.au. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  3. ^ Clark, Manning (18 April 1987). "Time for conclusions on the role of the Irish". The Age. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  4. ^ Kiernan, T. J., "Transportation from Ireland to Sydney, 1791-1816", Canberra : 1954.
  5. ^ Kiernan, T. J., "The Irish exiles in Australia", Burns & Oates, Melbourne : 1954.
  6. ^ Kiernan, T. J., "The white hound of the mountain, and other Irish folk tales", Devin-Adair Co., 1962.
  7. ^ O'Hara, Aidan (1997). I'll live till I die: Drumlin Publications. Leitrim: ISBN 1 873 43717 X.
  8. ^ Kiernan, T. J., "Pope Pius XII", with an introd. by Fulton Sheen, Clonmore & Reynolds, Dublin : 1958.
  9. ^ "Irish scholar loved an argument and flourished in Australia: in The Sydney Morning Herald. smh.com.au. 16 April 2010. retrieved 23 April 2010.
  10. ^ "Irish-Australian historian who was 'scholarly, fiery and a great teacher'". irishtimes.com. 17 April 2010. Retrieved 17 April 2010.
  11. ^ Kennedy, Edward M. (23 July 1999). "Tribute to John F. Kennedy Junior". jfklibrary.org. Retrieved 17 April 2010.