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  2. MacCormac family of County Armagh, Northern Ireland

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MacCormac_family_of_County...

    Dr Henry MacCormac married Mary Newsam, the daughter of William Newsam, a linen merchant, descended from an old English family that settled in Ireland in 1640. Henry MacCormac and Mary Newsam MacCormac were the parents of Sir William MacCormac, 1st Baronet , the most decorated surgeon of the late nineteenth century, who served as Serjeant ...

  3. Council of Irish Genealogical Organisations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_of_Irish...

    To provide a forum for family history and genealogical groups and societies which share an interest in Irish research.; To encourage, foster and promote greater public knowledge of and access to records relevant to genealogists, whether held by Civil, Ecclesiastical, or private bodies.

  4. List of Irish clans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Irish_clans

    Clans of Ireland is a modern organization that was started in 1989 and has eligibility criteria for surnames to be included on their register of Irish clans. This includes that the family or clan can trace their ancestry back to before 1691 which is generally considered to mark the end of the clan based lineage system in Ireland.

  5. Irish genealogy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_genealogy

    Blake Family Records, Martin J. Blake, volume one, 1902 and volume two, 1905; Leabhar Chlainne Suibhne: An Account of the Mac Sweeney Families of Ireland, with Pedigrees, Paul Walsh (priest), 1920; The Learned Family of O Duigenan, Paul Walsh, Irish Eccleastical Record, 1921

  6. Public Record Office of Northern Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Record_Office_of...

    The Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) is situated in Belfast, Northern Ireland. It is a division within the Engaged Communities Group of the Department for Communities (DfC). The Public Record Office of Northern Ireland is distinguished from other archival institutions in the United Kingdom by its unique combination of private ...

  7. Irish clans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_clans

    The Irish word clann is a borrowing from the Latin planta, meaning 'a plant, an offshoot, offspring, a single child or children, by extension race or descendants'. [7] For instance, the O'Daly family were poetically known as Clann Dalaigh, from a remote ancestor called Dalach.

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