Blarney, Baloney, Or Was It Maloney?


Here’s s pub-ready quiz blog post, tailored to your summon up the Irish Magic Meeting of the Minds.

Welcome to Blarney, Baloney, Or Was It Maloney?: The Ultimate St. Patrick’s Day Pub Quiz
Pull up a stool, grab a pint, and test whether you’re full of blarney or blessed with the luck of the Irish. This St. Patrick’s Day quiz mixes real history, wild myths, and a bit of craic to keep the whole table arguing—politely, we hope.

The Quiz

  1. Which of these is TRUE about St. Patrick?
    • A. He was born in Dublin
    • B. He was born in Britain
    • C. He was born in New York, on 5th Avenue
    • D. He never actually existed
  2. What famously brought young St. Patrick to Ireland in the first place?
    • A. A gap year backpacking trip
    • B. Exile by the Romans
    • C. Kidnapping and slavery
    • D. He followed a flock of sheep across the sea
  3. What did St. Patrick supposedly use the shamrock to explain?
    • A. How to find buried leprechaun gold
    • B. The Holy Trinity
    • C. Proper Guinness pouring technique
    • D. Irish unity between North and South
  4. According to tradition, what color did St. Patrick himself wear?
    • A. Green
    • B. Blue
    • C. Gold
    • D. Orange
  5. Why do many historians say the “St. Patrick drove out the snakes” story is nonsense?
    • A. Medieval PR campaign gone wrong
    • B. Ireland was too cold for snakes
    • C. The snakes were actually Vikings
    • D. The snakes all moved to England for the weather
  6. What is unusual about St. Patrick’s official status in the Catholic Church?
    • A. He was canonized twice
    • B. He was never officially canonized
    • C. He resigned from sainthood
    • D. He shares his sainthood with a leprechaun
  7. Before he was “Patrick,” what was his reported birth name?
    • A. Maewyn Succat
    • B. Seamus O’Saor
    • C. Liam O’Luck
    • D. Aidan McSaintly
  8. The tradition of “drowning the shamrock” is most closely associated with which activity?
    • A. Tossing shamrocks into the sea
    • B. Drinking whiskey or beer in St. Patrick’s honor
    • C. Washing coins in green water
    • D. Dunking your hat in the pub sink for luck
  9. Which of these is a mythological Irish figure, not a historical one?
    • A. Cú Chulainn
    • B. Michael Collins
    • C. Mary Robinson
    • D. Bono
  10. Which of these famous Irish cultural traditions is most linked to social dancing and fast fiddle tunes?
    • A. Sean-nós singing
    • B. Irish step dancing
    • C. Hurling
    • D. Gaelic football
  11. Trick question! Which of the following is actually MORE traditional for Irish eating history than green-dyed beer?
    • A. Corned beef and cabbage in ancient Celtic times
    • B. Boxty and soda bread
    • C. Shamrock smoothies
    • D. Emerald-colored donuts
  12. Bonus: In modern Irish pop culture, which series helped put contemporary, gritty Irish life on global screens?
    • A. Father Ted
    • B. Normal People
    • C. Riverdance: The Sitcom
    • D. Shamrock Shore

Answer Key & Explanations

B – Born in Britain. Patrick was born in Roman Britain, not Ireland—sorry, lads at the bar.
C – Kidnapping and slavery. He was captured by raiders as a teenager and enslaved as a shepherd in Ireland.
B – The Holy Trinity. Three leaves, one plant: Father, Son, Holy Spirit—handy visual aid for a tough concept.
B – Blue. Early depictions show him in blue robes; green only later became the color of Irish nationalism.
B – Ireland was too cold. There’s no evidence snakes ever lived there post–Ice Age, so the “snakes” were likely symbolic of paganism.
B – Never officially canonized. Despite being a patron saint, there was no formal Vatican canonization process for him.
A – Maewyn Succat. He later took the name Patrick from the Latin Patricius, meaning “noble” or “fatherly.”
B – Drinking in his honor. “Drowning the shamrock” means dropping a shamrock in your drink and downing it—sláinte, ya eejit.
A – Cú Chulainn. A legendary hero from Irish mythology; the others are real, modern Irish figures.
B – Irish step dancing. Think rapid-fire feet, fiddles, and enough energy to power the whole pub.
B – Boxty and soda bread. Green beer is a modern American invention; boxty and soda bread are far closer to the real Irish table.
B – Normal People. The hit series based on Sally Rooney’s novel brought modern Irish romance and angst to screens worldwide.

Now, who’s buying the next round—and who’s demanding a rematch quiz?

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