With support from the University of Richmond

New perspectives on how history is made

Belfast: City history captured on walls

The life and times of a group of 18th century revolutionaries has been marked with a new work of public art which has gone on permanent display in Belfast.

The four paintings in the city's Cathedral Quarter depict the history of the Society of United Irishmen - a movement co-founded by Wolfe Tone that sought to create an independent Ireland free from English rule in the 1790s.

They have been erected in the newly-restored Warehouse Lane in the Four Corners area where Belfast members of the society met in secret over 200 years ago, calling themselves the Muddlers Club.
Read entire article at BBC