- Faolán Mac an
Ghabhann na Scéal, died 1423, was an
Irish writer and genealogist. He was one of the ten
scribes of
Leabhar Ua Maine,
commissioned by Archbishop...
- Gillick,
Abdoulaye Konaté,
Alice Maher, and
Tracey Rose. Art
critic Niamh Nic
Ghabhann described it as "[engaging] in an elegant, ****ured,
often furious debate...
- Cúisín (fl. c.1400); the only
other scribe known by name is Faolán Mac an
Ghabhann na Scéal (d. 1423). It is a m****ive,
oversized vellum book
written in Irish...
- was
established in the
nearby townland of Brigown.
Brigown (Irish: Brí
Ghabhann,
meaning "hill of the smiths") was
founded by a monk
named Fionnchú (Findchú...
-
Killygowan (Irish
derived place name,
Coill Uí
Ghabhann meaning either ‘The Wood of O’Gowan’ or ‘The Wood of the Blacksmith’.) is a
townland in the civil...
- Bhaird)
Loughanure (Loch an Iúir)
Maghery (An Mhachaire)
Meenagowan (Min A
Ghabhann)
Meenaleck Meenbanad Mullaghduff (Mullach Dubh)
Ranafast (Rann na Feirste)...
-
Mullinavat | logainm.ie". logainm.ie.
Retrieved 4
November 2018. "Baile an
Ghabhann Beag /
Smithstown | logainm.ie". logainm.ie.
Retrieved 4
November 2018...
-
Ardigon (from
Irish Ard an
Ghabhann 'height of the smith') is a
rural townland in
County Down,
Northern Ireland. It has an area of 484.5
acres (1.961 km2)...
-
scribe of the book
known by name is Faolán Mac an
Ghabhann na Scéal, who died in 1423. Mac an
Ghabhann's poem,
Adham ar n-athair uile, was
penned by Cúisín...
-
genuine and had been
decoded by her brother,
Joseph Plunkett; and Síle Nic
Ghabhann,
writing in Irish,
defended her father,
Eugene Smyth, who had
claimed to...