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1911 Copyright act and other anachronisms of Ireland & The UK

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  • 14-07-2011 8:25am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 4,041 ✭✭✭


    The 1911 Copyright act states that a copy of every publication must go to the British Library, Cambridge, Oxford, University in Scotland & Trinity College Dublin

    I have been told that this has never repealed and every book, newspaper, song sheet published in the UK must have a copy sent to Trinity.

    So any other examples of this out there


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 3,284 ✭✭✭dubhthach


    Library of Congress in the US. All publications in US must have a copy in Library of Congress. What is know as a "Deposit Library" see the following page on wiki:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deposit_library


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,549 ✭✭✭✭Judgement Day


    I don't know but I should have thought a great many of our laws are still unchanged from pre-independence days?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,549 ✭✭✭✭Judgement Day


    The Commissioners of Irish Lights http://www.commissionersofirishlights.com/cil/history.aspx - see history below from their website - is another hangover from the old days which still operates in a sort of 'no man's land' presided over by the British and Irish governments.


    A Brief History of Irish Lights

    The oldest operational lighthouse in Ireland and the British Isles is at Hook Head.
    The tower, with additions and modifications, dates from the Norman times, 12th century, and is reputed to be built on the site where the monks of St. Dubhan established a fire beacon in the 5th century.

    Another Norman lighthouse at Youghal was in the hands of local sisters attached to St Anne's Convent, but the tower fell out of use around Cromwell's time and was replaced by the present tower in 1852.

    The Commissioners of Irish Lights are the statutory Lighthouse Authority for all of Ireland. Originally lighthouses were in private hands and in 1665 King Charles II granted letters patent to Sir Robert Reading to erect six lighthouses on the coast of Ireland, two of which were placed on Howth, one to mark the land, the other to lead over the bar; the others were at Old Head of Kinsale, Barry Oge's castle (now Charlesfort, near Kinsale), Hook Head and Isle of Magee, near Carrickfergus. Of these six lights, two were short lived - the Howth bar light and Isle of Magee. The latter was re-established later on the Lesser Copeland Island. All these lights had a coal fire on each of their roofs.

    These lighthouses were transferred to certain commissioners set up by Queen Anne in 1704. (These commissioners were not the present Commissioners of Irish Lights.) In 1717, during the reign of George I, the lands on which barracks and lighthouses were built were vested in the Crown at a price ascertained by special commissioners. These powers were transferred to the Commissioners for Barracks in 1767.

    In 1708, Dublin Corporation, through Parliament, set up a Committee known as the Ballast Committee. In 1786 an act of the Irish Parliament replaced the Ballast Committee with a new ‘body corporate and politik’, independent of Dublin Corporation, called the Corporation for Preserving and Improving the Port of Dublin (also known as the Ballast Board). The constitution of this Board is that of the present Commissioners of Irish Lights.

    HM Revenue Commissioners were given power in 1796 to erect lighthouses on the coasts of Wexford, Mayo, and Galway. Further acts between 1800 and 1806 were passed in connection with lighthouses, dues, and purchasing land for lighthouses. In 1810 powers given to the Commissioners for Barracks and others between 1767 and 1806 were all vested in the Corporation for Preserving and Improving the Port of Dublin or the Ballast Board.

    This Board took over the general lighting and marking of the coast when fourteen lighthouses were transferred to it - South Rock, Old Head, Wicklow (2), Howth, Copeland, Hook, Cranfield, Loophead, Aranmore, Clare Island, Balbriggan, Duncannon Fort, and Charlesfort.

    The Merchant Shipping Act of 1854 divided the Corporation or Ballast Board into two distinct corporate bodies, identical in personnel and constitution, namely the Corporation for Preserving and Improving the Port of Dublin for Dublin port, and the Port of Dublin Corporation for lighthouses, lightships, buoys, and beacons around the coast of Ireland.

    The severance begun in 1854 was completed by the Dublin Port Act of 1867, the Corporation for Preserving and Improving the Port of Dublin became the Dublin Port and Docks Board and the Port of Dublin Corporation became the Commissioners of Irish Lights.

    Originally, the number of Commissioners was twenty two, but when the position of High Sheriff of Dublin was abolished, the number was reduced to twenty-one. In 1996 it was further reduced to sixteen, viz the Lord Mayor of Dublin, three members of Dublin Corporation, elected annually by the Corporation and twelve co-opted members.

    On 2 December 1999 the Irish and UK Governments signed orders establishing the six Implementation Bodies agreed in the Belfast Agreement. One of these is the Foyle, Carlingford and Irish Lights Commission. Primary legislation is required in both Westminster and Dublin to enable the functions of the Commissioners of Irish Lights to be incorporated into the new body. In the meantime the Commissioners of Irish Lights continue to operate under existing Irish and UK law.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,549 ✭✭✭✭Judgement Day


    Another major relic of times past is the Fishguard & Rosslare Railways & Harbours Company which refuses to die. It owns Rosslare & Fishguard ports and the defunct railway line from Rosslare Strand to Waterford. Its dissolution, if it ever happens, will involve Acts of parliament in both Dublin and Westminster.

    800px-Fishguard_%26_Rosslare_Railways_and_Harbours_Company_Cerificate.jpg


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