Umma-More: The Story of an Irish FamilyElement Books, 1983 - 447 sider The Magan and Biddulph families of Ireland from pre-history to the presen. Includes the history of Ireland, particularly an analysis of this century. |
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Side 231
... Rule ' - ' Rome Rule ' to the Protestants — became the demand of the native Catholic Irish , led by the Protestant settler - family landowner , Charles Stuart Parnell . The initial demand was not for independence . Home Rule was a ...
... Rule ' - ' Rome Rule ' to the Protestants — became the demand of the native Catholic Irish , led by the Protestant settler - family landowner , Charles Stuart Parnell . The initial demand was not for independence . Home Rule was a ...
Side 387
... Rule bill lying down . They were recruiting their own corps of volunteers . By the spring of 1914 , the parliamentary stages of the bill were still incomplete , but things were reaching boiling point in Ireland . The two opposing ...
... Rule bill lying down . They were recruiting their own corps of volunteers . By the spring of 1914 , the parliamentary stages of the bill were still incomplete , but things were reaching boiling point in Ireland . The two opposing ...
Side 409
... Rule Bill was tabled , England reserved the question of defence to herself . Nevertheless , the implication of the Home Rule provisions was that Britain saw no danger that a self - governing Ireland would ally herself to a hostile power ...
... Rule Bill was tabled , England reserved the question of defence to herself . Nevertheless , the implication of the Home Rule provisions was that Britain saw no danger that a self - governing Ireland would ally herself to a hostile power ...
Innhold
BOOK | 61 |
The Unsettling of a Nation The First Half of | 151 |
Religion | 187 |
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ancient Irish army Arthur Magan Assheton Athlone Aunt Ballymore Battle became Biddulph Britain British brother Catholic Church Celtic Celts chiefs Christian Clonearl Connaught Cromwell culture daughter death descendants died Dublin early eighteenth century England English settlers enormous estates Europe father force French Georgina Hibernicised Home Rule Humphry Magan hundred Irishmen Killyon King landed gentry landowners large number later less lived Lord Lough Ree Magan family Magan the Elder Magan the Younger marriage married Morgan Magan mother Moylurg nationalist native never nevertheless nineteenth century no-one Norman Northern Ireland O'Conor old Irish Parliament peasantry peerage Penal Laws Percy perhaps political priest Protestant Ascendancy Rathrobin rebellion remained Republic of Ireland Richard Roman Catholic seventeenth century Sinn Fein social society South Southern suppose tenants thousand threat Tilson tower-house Treaty of Limerick Tudor Ulster loyalists Umma-More united Ireland Westmeath wife William Henry Magan