- do****ents of the kind. In
Irish folklore she is
commonly known as Gráinne
Mhaol (anglicised as Granuaile) and is a well-known
historical figure in sixteenth-century...
-
widowed in 1565, the
legendary pirate queen and
Irish clan
leader Gráinne
Mhaol (Grace O'Malley)
allegedly took a
shipwrecked sailor as her lover. The affair...
-
September 2011.
Retrieved 9
April 2012. Gaffney,
Siobhan (2004). "Grainne
Mhaol".
Ireland on Sunday. "Biography". NZ On Screen. "Lucy
Lawless On Her Family...
- (medieval Gaelic:
Alaxandair mac Maíl Coluim;
modern Gaelic:
Alasdair mac
Mhaol Chaluim; c. 1078 – 23
April 1124),
posthumously nicknamed The Fierce, was...
- Clan MacCallum/Malcolm Mac
Mhaol Chaluim Crest: A
tower argent with blue
window and port
Motto In
ardua tendit (He aims at
difficult things)
Profile Region...
-
Keith (Scottish Gaelic:
Baile Chèith, or Cèith
Mhaol Rubha (archaic)) is a
small town in the
Moray council area in
north east Scotland. It has a po****tion...
-
Dailly (Scottish Gaelic: Dail
Mhaol Chiarain) is a
village in
South Ayrshire, Scotland. It is
located on the
Water of Girvan, five
miles (eight kilometres)...
- glé
gheur /kleː ʝiaɾ/ "very sharp" /m/ → /v/ maol /mɯːl̪ˠ/ "bald" → glé
mhaol /kleː vɯːl̪ˠ/ "very bald" /mj/ → /vj/ (before a back vowel)
meallta /mjaul̪ˠt̪ə/...
-
facilities and
organise rowing competitions.
These clubs include Gráinne
Mhaol Rowing Club,
Tribesmen Rowing Club,
Galway Rowing Club, Coláiste Iognáid...
-
sculpture titled Grainne Mhaol Looking Out to Sea. The sculpture,
carved in walnut,
depicted the head of
Grace O'Malley (Grainne
Mhaol) - the 16th century...