-
Irish themselves" (Irish: Níos Gaelaí ná na
Gaeil féin; Latin:
Hiberniores Hibernis ipsis) is a
phrase used in
Irish historiography to
describe a phenomenon...
- island" as the Gr****s
interpreted it) "inhabited by the
different race of
Hiberni" (gens hibernorum), and
Britain as
insula Albionum, "island of the Albions"...
-
empire in 122 AD. At that time,
Ireland was po****ted by a
people known as
Hiberni, the
northern third or so of
Great Britain by a
people known as
Picts and...
-
pensiles eorum hortos promoventibus in
solem rotis olitoribus rursusque hibernis diebus intra specularium munimenta revocantibus Yoon, Sang Jun; Woudstra...
-
given the job of
being Punch's
Irish expert,
often under the
pseudonym Hibernis Hibernior ("more
Irish than the Irish").
Thackeray became responsible for...
- time in 98 AD by Tacitus: ...nec iam de
limite imperii et ripa, sed de
hibernis legionum et de
possessione dubitatum (...not only were the
frontier of...
-
established foreign regiments.
These were
three Irish regiments (Irlanda,
Hiberni and Ultonia); one
Italian (Naples) and five
Swiss (Wimpssen, Reding, Betschart...
-
completely integrated,
giving rise to the well
known phrase 'Hiberniores
Hibernis ipsis' (more
Irish than the
Irish themselves).
These formed septs on the...
- Council.
Retrieved 9
February 2024. See Art Cosgrove, 'Hiberniores
Ipsis Hibernis', Late
Medieval Ireland 1370–1541 (Dublin, 1981) for a
discussion of the...
-
right the crown." The
motto on the seal was Pro Deo, Rege, et Patria,
Hiberni Unanimes (For God, King and Fatherland,
Ireland is United). A National...