- Néill" ("The O'Neill"). The
nickname "Shane the Proud" (Irish: Seán an
Díomais),
which appears in nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century po****r histories...
-
Donnghaile was a
member of the
bardic family that had
fostered Séan 'an
díomais' Ó Néill (Shane O'Neill), and
there is a
lament for
Shane –
Ceist ar eolchibh...
- 6 Cuchullians,
Dunloy 6 1924, 1925, 1926, 1931, 1935, 1936 7
Seagan An
Diomais 5 1903, 1906, 1908, 1909, 1910 8
Patrick Sarsfields 4 1913, 1941, 1967...
-
recorded as
being with
Calbhach Ó
Domhnaill in a
victory over Seán an
Díomais Ó Néill.
Domhnall Gorm was
killed in 1568 by his kin and was succeeded...
- 1911, 1912, 1947 Tír na nÓg,
Randalstown 3 1922, 1926, 1939
Seagan An
Diomais 3 1908, 1910, 1915 12
Brian Oge 2 1901, 1909 Tír na nÓg,
Belfast 2 1904...
-
twelve at the time. When he grew up,
Shane (who is
remembered as Séan an
Diomais, or "Shane the Proud")
drove his
father out of Ulster, and was inaugurated...
- Ó Néill,
known in
later centuries as "Shane the Proud" (Irish: Seán an
Díomais), was Lord of Tír Eoghain, and the most
powerful Irish clan
chief in Ulster...
-
founded in 1905 and
named after the 16th-century
Ulster king Seán an
díomais Ó Néill, is
essentially a
continuation of the
first club. In 1944 the formation...
-
represented by Lees and
Antrim of
Ulster who were
represented by
Seaghan an
Diomáis, with Cork
winning by 6–6 to 1–2. The All-Ireland
final between Cork and...