-
partly with the
Gaelic resurgence of the High
Middle Ages. The O'Neill
Clandeboy (Ó Néill
Clann Aodha Buidhe) who
reigned in the
territory descended from...
- The O'Neill
dynasty (Irish: Ó Néill) are a
lineage of
Irish Gaelic origin that held
prominent positions and
titles in
Ireland and elsewhere. As
kings of...
- the last de
Burgh earl in 1333, the
resulting Gaelic recovery expanded Clandeboy and
eroded the earldom's
territory until by the 15th
century only the...
-
Lough Neagh, 2.7
miles from Randalstown.
Built in 1345 by a
member of the
Clandeboy O'Neill dynasty, it was
originally known as Edenduffcarrick,
meaning "brow...
- Santos-o-Velho – 30
March 1940 in Palmela) was the head of the O'Neill
Clandeboy (Ó Néill
Clann Aodha Buidhe) dynasty,
which ruled a
kingdom in Gaelic...
- near Slieve-na-Aura. Hugh
MacFelim O'Neill,
Prince of the O'Neills of
Clandeboy,
arrived at the camp of the
McQuillans with reinforcements.
During the...
- this side
Blackstafe as the
other side,
Copelande islands, the Dufferin,
Clandeboy, Kilultoghe, the
Glynes with the Raughlines,
Momerie and Carie, the Rowte...
-
recent common ancestor, such as the
Clann Aodha Buidhe or the O'Neills of
Clandeboy,
whose ancestor was Aodh
Buidhe who died in 1298. Such a "clan", if sufficiently...
-
local Irish lord, in
which Lord
Deputy Es****
killed many of the lord of
Clandeboy's kin. In the Nine Years' War of 1594–1603, an
alliance of
northern Gaelic...
- hÚigínn,
sometime in the late
seventeenth century. It was made for the
Clandeboy O'Neills.
Alongside the
poems are two
prose historical tracts, dating...