Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Oliver Plunkett, 1st Baron Louth (d. c. 1555), was an Irish peer. He was the eldest son of Sir Richard (or: Patrick, Lodge vol. 6, p. 161) Plunkett of Beaulieu (died 1508), High Sheriff of Louth , and his wife Catherine Nangle, daughter of Thomas Nangle, 15th Baron of Navan .
Oliver Plunkett was born on 1 November 1625 (earlier biographers gave his date of birth as 1 November 1629, but 1625 has been the consensus since the 1930s) [2] in Loughcrew, County Meath, Ireland, to well-to-do parents with Hiberno-Norman ancestors.
Matthew Plunkett, de jure 9th Baron Louth (1698–1754) Oliver Plunkett, ''de jure'' 10th Baron Louth (1727–1763) Thomas Oliver Plunkett, 11th Baron Louth (1757–1823) (restored to title) Thomas Oliver Plunkett, 12th Baron Louth (1809–1849) Randal Percy Otway Plunkett, 13th Baron Louth (1832–1883) Randal Pilgrim Ralph Plunkett, 14th ...
St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church is located on West Street, Drogheda, County Louth, Ireland. Designed by John O'Neill and William Henry Byrne and built in the French Gothic style of local limestone ashlar in 1884. This Roman Catholic church is known for its tall west gable, rose window and for containing the national shrine of St. Oliver Plunkett.
Saint Oliver Plunkett (1625–1681), Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh and martyr, 1st cousin of Luke Plunkett Sir Nicholas Plunkett (1602–1680), Irish confederate Sir Francis Richard Plunkett (1835–1907), British diplomat
Matthew Plunkett, 7th Baron Louth (died September 1689) was an Irish Jacobite soldier and peer. Louth was the son of Oliver Plunkett, 6th Baron Louth, and Lady Mary Dillon, the daughter of Randal MacDonnell, 1st Earl of Antrim. In 1679 he succeeded to his father's peerage and assumed his seat in the Irish House of Lords.
Oliver Plunketts GFC is a GAA club located in Drogheda, County Louth, Ireland.The club was formed in 1942 by the amalgamation of Ramblers United and St Joseph's. [1] From its base on the Slane road, the club serves the Mell Parish in West Drogheda and fields gaelic football teams in competitions organised by Louth GAA.
The next primate was Oliver Plunkett (1669–81). Shortly after his accession to the see, he was obliged to defend the primatial rights of Armagh against the claims put forward for Dublin by its archbishop, Peter Talbot. At a meeting of the Roman clergy in Dublin in 1670, each of these prelates refused to subscribe subsequent to the other.