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Clonakilty GAA won their first adult hurling county title when they won the Cork Minor B Hurling Championship in 2007. Clonakilty R.F.C. also became a senior rugby club in 2001 and spent 12 years in the All-Ireland League until they were relegated to Division 1 of the Munster Junior League. Clonakilty A.F.C. won the Beamish Cup in 2008 & 1995 ...
History of the Irish Parliament, 1692–1800, Publisher: Ulster Historical Foundation (28 Feb 2002), ISBN 1-903688-09-4 T. W. Moody, F. X. Martin, F. J. Byrne, A New History of Ireland 1534-1691 , Oxford University Press, 1978
The Tree of Liberty Stone Maynooth: Co. Kildare: United Irishmen [57] Kearns and Perry Memorial Monasteroris Co. Offaly: Mogue Kearns and Anthony Perry [58] United Irishmen Memorial Mountmellick: Co. Laois: General war memorial [59] 1798 Monument Mullens Cross Co. Meath: Battle of Knightstown Bog [60] 1798 Memorial Cleariestown: Co. Wexford ...
Clan Sweeney is an Irish clan of Scottish origin. The Mac Suibhne family did not permanently settle in Ireland before the beginning of the 14th century, when they became Gallowglass soldiers for the Ua Domnaill dynasty of Tír Chonaill. [1]
"The Churches of Clonakilty: An Architectural Discussion" (PDF). Dúchas: Clonakilty Heritage. 2: 211– 249. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 November 2021; Keohane, Frank (2020). The Buildings of Ireland: Cork City and County. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. 329. ISBN 978-0-300-22487-0.
The island was granted by Queen Elizabeth I to the Church of Ireland Bishop of Ross in 1584. During the Irish Confederate Wars, when a Protestant force led by Lord Forbes retook the town of Clonakilty from Catholic rebels in 1642, several hundred rebels fled towards the island to take refuge, but were caught and drowned in the rising tide before reaching Inchydoney.
Keith Lamb/Patrick Bowe, A History of Gardening in Ireland, The Stationery Office, 1995 ISBN 0-7076-1666-2; Cork 365, Sean Beecher, The Collins Press 2005 ISBN 1-903464-92-7; Irish Gardens and Demesnes from 1830, Edward Malins and Patrick Bowe, Rizolli, New York 1980, ISBN 0-8478-0342-2; The lost demesnes of Bantry Bay, Nigel Everett, Hafod Press
Timothy John Deasy [1] (20 February 1839 - 18 December 1880) was an Irish survivor of the Great Famine who emigrated with his family to Massachusetts in the United States.He later became an officer in the Union Army during the American Civil War, as well as a revolutionary fighting alongside the Irish Republican Brotherhood in both Canada during the Fenian Raids and Ireland during the Fenian ...