- The
Stone of
Scone (/ˈskuːn/;
Scottish Gaelic: An Lia Fàil,
meaning Stone of Destiny, also
called clach-na-cinneam****nn; Scots:
Stane o Scone) is an oblong...
- is a
Gaelic system for p****ing on
titles and lands. In this
system the
Tanist (Irish: Tánaiste;
Scottish Gaelic: Tànaiste; Manx: Tanishtey) is the office...
-
title of secundarius,
which may
indicate a
position similar to the
Celtic tanist, a
recognised successor closely ****ociated with the
reigning monarch. This...
-
Niall Connallagh O'Neill,
tanist of
Tyrone (1519–1544), and was
fostered by the O'Lunaigh
family of Munterluney. As
tanist,
Niall Connallach was designated...
- to be his
deputy or '
tanist' (tánaiste). When the
chieftain or king died, his
tanist would automatically succeed him. The
tanist had to
share the same...
-
constructed with the
perfect participle; e.g., ma bû-r-um, da čaman rasid-a ḵot
tanist-um, "I
shall go, and may be able to get to Čaman".
Participial nominalization...
-
further down. The top
social layer was the sóernemed,
which included kings,
tanists,
ceann finte, fili, clerics, and
their immediate families. The
roles of...
- Lord 1501–1570
Ellen FitzGerald Cormac 14th Lord d. 1583
tanist Callaghan 15th Lord
tanist resigned 1584
Donogh O'Brien 4th Earl
Thomond d. 1624 Cormac...
-
Habsburg emperors. In the
partially elective system of tanistry, the heir or
tanist was
elected from the
qualified males of the
royal family.
Different monarchies...
- of a smith.
spalpeen – A
migratory labourer in Ireland. From spailpín.
tanist – The
deputy and
successor of a
chieftain or
religious leader. A term used...