- Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair (1625 –
January 1698) was a 17th-century
Irish language poet. He
lived through a
period of
change in
Irish history, and his work reflects...
-
later include Gofraidh Fionn Ó Dálaigh (fourteenth century), Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair (seventeenth century) and Aogán Ó
Rathaille (eighteenth century). Eibhlín...
- English-language traditions, such as
Eoghan Rua Ó Súilleabháin, Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair,
Jonathan Swift,
Oscar Wilde, W. B. Yeats,
Samuel Beckett,
James Joyce...
-
translation of
classic works into English.
These included Ó
Bruadair,
Selected Poems of Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair (1985) and Ó
Rathaille The
Poems of Aodhaghán Ó Rathaille...
-
Duibhgeannain 15th/16th
century Tomás Ó
Cobhthaigh 17th
century Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair Piaras Feiritéar
Donnchadh Mac an
Caoilfhiaclaigh Aogán Ó
Rathaille Séafraidh...
-
planning and
purchasing of land for the
school in Dungiven,
Diarmaid Ua
Bruadair (Prin****l of Gaelcholáiste Dhoire) and his
colleagues reportedly tried...
- ****umed
willingness to
deliver their demands. In 1685,
Irish bard Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair celebrated his
accession as
ensuring the
revived supremacy of both the...
-
Duibhgeannain 15th/16th
century Tomás Ó
Cobhthaigh 17th
century Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair Piaras Feiritéar
Donnchadh Mac an
Caoilfhiaclaigh Aogán Ó
Rathaille Séafraidh...
-
fought for at some
point in the
Civil Wars. The
Catholic poet Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair concluded that the
Restoration was "Purgatory" for
Irish Catholics, while...
-
traditional bardic poetry in
classical Gaelic by Pádraigín Haicéad and Dáibhí Ó
Bruadair, the 17th-century
Protestant translation of the
Christian Bible by Bishop...