- Manchán,
Mainchín, Manchéne and a
variety of
other spellings may
refer to: Manaccan,
south Cornwall, England,
United Kingdom.
Ireland Mainchín of Limerick...
-
Mainchín mac
Setnai (fl. late 6th century), also
anglicised to Munchin, was
allegedly the
founder of the
church of
Luimneach (now Limerick), Ireland, and...
-
Mainchín mac Colláin was an
Irish saint in
Corran who is
supposed to have
flourished in the late 5th or 6th century.
Mainchín mac Colláin is commemorated...
-
Mannix Joyce (Irish:
Mainchín Seoighe, 1924 – 3 July 2006) was an
Irish local historian and writer,
known particularly for his
publications on
County Limerick...
- do****entary on the
hermit monks of the
Catholic Carthusian Order.
Jangam Monk
Mainchín, and Monahan,
names of
Gaelic origin,
diminutive of Irish: Manach, Latin:...
- had
connections to
Ailtiri na hAiséirghe
while South's 1964
biographer Mainchin Seoighe believed he was a member. He had
received military training as...
- Wallis: His Life and
Times and
Death by
Mainchin Seoighe,
published in
Ireland in 1994.[citation needed]
Mainchin Seoighe,
Staker Wallis: His Life and Times...
- of
Names in
Irish Annals.
Retrieved 5 May 2011.
Patrick Woulfe (1923). "
Mainchín".
Irish Names and Surnames.
Retrieved 5 May 2011.
Patrick Woulfe (1923)...
-
possibly owing to
confusion with one of
several churchmen named Manchán or
Mainchín. The most
reliable genealogy makes him a son of Sillán son of Conall, who...
-
their prayers.
Saint Mainchín is
described as Mac Creiche's son, or
spiritual son, whom Mac
Creiche baptized and taught.
Mainchín and Mac
Creiche went...