A PROGRAMME to look at the life and work of local Protestant scholar Francis Joseph Bigger begins in Down County Museum on Saturday, March 2.
Bigger, who lived for a time in Jordan’s Castle in Ardglass, was a leading figure in rescuing early Christian medieval buildings and artefacts in the Lecale area between 1890 and 1920.
Led by Newry, Mourne and Down District Council, through the Down County Museum and Green Pine Consultants, the programme is part of the Shared History and Cultural Programme under the Building Positive Relations theme.
The project is supported by the European Union’s PEACE IV Programme, which is managed by the Special EU Programmes Body (SEUPB).
The project’s primary objective is promoting positive relations characterised by respect, where cultural diversity is celebrated, and people can live, learn and socialise together, free from prejudice, hate and intolerance.
The programme brings together some of the country’s top archaeologists, including Dr Colm Donnelly and Dr Finbar McCormick, from Queen’s University Belfast, with the foremost experts on the life of Francis Joseph Bigger, such as Roland Spottiswoode, Roger Dixon and local guide Duane Fitzsimons.
Throughout the spring there will be a series of five free morning talks held in Down County Museum’s lecture theatre, followed by bus trips to learn about some of the local sites.
There will also be a visit to Carlingford to look at the way local history and archaeology can assist people to understand and learn about their heritage. Topics to be addressed include the Tower Houses of Lecale, St Patrick in Co Down and maximising heritage locally.
The final event will be a half-day conference on the Bigger legacy in early June, followed by a tour facilitated by Mr Fitzsimons.
Participants will be invited to ask questions and share ideas, to encourage a better understanding of the joint heritage of the area and could lead to a local heritage trail.
Newry, Mourne and Down District Council Chairman, Councillor Mark Murnin said: “This programme is a wonderful opportunity to find out more about our area and the people who lived here through the ages.
“It also gives us an opportunity to learn about an important local historian and scholar who did so much to ensure that important building and artefacts would be preserved for future generations.”
As part of funding requirements for the programme, participants are asked to attend the majority of the morning talks and trips and commit 26 hours.
Match-funding for the project has been provided by the Executive Office in Northern Ireland and the Department for Rural and Community Development in Ireland.