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  2. General Register Office (Northern Ireland) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Register_Office...

    Life event certificates can be ordered online, [1] by telephone (0300 200 7890 or 028 91513101 if outside NI) or by post, with a form downloaded from the site. Applications for collection in person may only be made at the General Register Office in Belfast, with delivery options of third working day for the basic fee, and same day, usually within 30 minutes, for a higher fee.

  3. Irish Catholic Martyrs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_Catholic_Martyrs

    As the Whig-controlled Parliament of Ireland passed the Penal Laws, which progressively criminalized Roman Catholicism and stripped away from its adherents all rights under the law, [34] a miracle connected to the ongoing religious persecution in Ireland took place, according to Diocesan and municipal records, at Győr in the Kingdom of Hungary.

  4. Parish register - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parish_register

    The church books constitute of birth, death, marriage and moving in/out records, all of which were linked to the parish catechetical book, which was replaced in 1895 by the parish book. In country side parishes, each village or industrial town had its own section in the catechetical book, each farmyard its own page, and each person its own row.

  5. Catholic Church in Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_in_Ireland

    The Catholic Church in Ireland, or Irish Catholic Church, is part of the worldwide Catholic Church in communion with the Holy See. With 3.5 million members (in the Republic of Ireland), it is the largest Christian church in Ireland. In the Republic of Ireland's 2022 census, 69% of the population identified as Roman Catholic. [2]

  6. Wexford Martyrs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wexford_Martyrs

    The Wexford Martyrs were Matthew Lambert, Robert Meyler, Edward Cheevers and Patrick Cavanagh.In 1581, they were convicted of high treason for aiding in the escape of James Eustace, 3rd Viscount Baltinglass; for similarly conveying a Jesuit and other Catholic priests and laymen out of Ireland; and for refusing to take the Oath of Supremacy which declared Elizabeth I of England to be the ...

  7. Patrick O'Loughran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_O'Loughran

    Patrick O'Loughran (in Irish: Pádraig Ó Lochráin) (died 1 February 1612) was a priest of the archdiocese of Armagh and an Irish Catholic Martyr. O'Loughran was born in Donaghmore, County Tyrone to an Erenagh family. He left Ireland for Flanders to pursue his education some time before the Flight of the Earls in September 1607.

  8. Nicholas Sheehy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Sheehy

    Father Nicholas Sheehy (1728–1766) was an 18th-century Irish Roman Catholic priest who was executed on the charge of being an accessory to murder. Father Sheehy was a prominent and vocal opponent of the Penal Laws, which subjected the whole Catholic Church in Ireland to religious persecution, and as a vocal activist for Catholic Emancipation.

  9. John Charles McQuaid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Charles_McQuaid

    This answer appeared to satisfy him and he lay back on the pillow to await death. He died at about 11 a.m. [48] He is buried in St. Mary's Pro-Cathedral in Dublin, the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese. [12] In his book Twentieth Century Ireland, published in 2005, Dermot Keogh writes: Ostensibly the old order was changing.

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