Infobox newspaper name The IrishCatholic image File IrishCatholicLogo.png 180px type weekly religion ... The Agricultural Trust political Catholic headquarters The Irish Farm Centre, Bluebell, Dublin 12 editor ... The IrishCatholic is an Ireland Irish weekly Roman Catholic newspaper, providing news and commentary about the Roman Catholic Church . The 32 page Tabloid newspaper format tabloid paper is delivered ... Catholic hierarchy in Ireland. The IrishCatholic was founded in 1888 by Timothy Daniel Sullivan , a former Lord Mayor of Dublin and an Irish Parliamentary Party IPP Member of Parliament MP at Parliament ... of 26,128 to 27,177 copies. ref IrishCatholic, 2 December 2004, p. 24 ref As someone who had previously written for The Sunday Business Post and Magill Magazine, before he came to The IrishCatholic ... that the Irish Farmers Journal intended to buy The IrishCatholic. ref http www.unison.ie irish independent stories.php3?ca 184&si 1786588&issue id 15321 ref The takeover of The IrishCatholic by the Irish ... stories.php3?ca 9&si 1801640&issue id 15420 ref Trivia The IrishCatholic has only failed ... , Dublin 1988 reflist External links http www.irishcatholic.ie IrishCatholic Website Irish religious newspapers Category Newspapers published in Ireland IrishCatholic, The ..., had worked at The Nation Irish newspaper The Nation newspaper. William Francis Dennehy ran the paper ... associate of William Martin Murphy . Leo Fogarty , Patrick s son, was managing director of The IrishCatholic from 1936 until 1977. John Ryan was editor from 1936 until 1981, the longest serving editor in the history of the publication. Recent events When David Quinn Irish journalist David Quinn resigned in 2003 to work for the Irish Independent , Simon Rowe , a member of Opus Dei , was appointed ... of an article that criticised the Irish bishops conference. ref http www.paddydoyle.com editortoquit.html ... the Irish bishops on the matter of the EU and the Citizenship referendum. He is the author of new book ... more details
About the cultural group the newspaper The IrishCatholic No footnotes date November 2010 File CelticCross.svg thumb 150px A Celtic Christian Cross, a symbol of the Catholic Church and Christianity in Ireland File San patricios flag.jpg thumb An Irish American flag. ref Smith, W. Flags through the Ages ... of Flags, Lorenz Books, 1999, 2007. ref IrishCatholic is a term used to describe people who are both Roman Catholic and Irish people Irish or of Irish diaspora Irish descent . The term is not used to describe a separate creed or sect in the sense that Anglo Catholic , Old Catholic , Eastern Orthodox Christian Eastern Orthodox Catholic might be. Neither does the term mean that it is an Particular Church Autonomous sui iuris Particular Church Rite , such as Greek Catholic or Chaldean Catholic . Divisions between Irish Catholics and Irish Protestantism Protestants both those who would eventually ..., a majority of Protestant s thus, both aspects being Catholic, and being Irish at times separated ... Catholic 22&source gbs toc r&cad 3 v onepage&q&f false The Irish Cultural, Political, Social, and Religious Heritages http books.google.com books?id dPNCR4 4LIC&pg PA33&dq 22Irish Catholic 22&source ...&dq 22Irish Catholic 22&source gbs toc r&cad 3 v onepage&q&f false Irish America and the Course of Irish ... of Hibernians in Minnesota webpage http cuapress.cua.edu BOOKS viewbook.cfm?Book MCIA The IrishCatholic .... For example, while the majority of Irish Catholics saw themselves as having an identity independent ... British rule were in fact Protestant. During the Irish Rebellion of 1798 , both Catholics and Protestants ... endured discrimination based on not being part of the established church. Irish Catholics can be found ... initiated by duress as was the case with the Great Famine Ireland Great Irish Famine in the late ... Celtic Christianity Roman Catholicism in Ireland Saint Patrick s Day Irish American Irish Australian Irish Canadian Irish diaspora Irish migration to Britain Irish Newfoundlander Irish people Irish ... more details
The IrishCatholic Bishops Conference Gaelic language Gaelic , Comhdh il Easpag Caitliceach ireann is the episcopal conference of the Roman Catholic term Roman Catholic Church Catholic Bishop Catholic Church bishops in Ireland . Their meetings generally take place a number of times a year in Maynooth , County Kildare , the location of St Patrick s College, Maynooth , Ireland s national Catholic seminary . While each diocesan bishop bishop is autonomous in his own diocese , meetings of the conference give bishops a chance to discuss issues of mutual concern, or issues of national policy. TOCright Background In the Catholic Church, the episcopal conference Bishops Conference is an official assembly of all the bishops of a given territory. Episcopal conferences have long existed as informal entities, but were first established as formal bodies by the Second Vatican Council Christus Dominus , 38 , and implemented by Pope Paul VI s 1966 motu proprio Ecclesiae sanctae . The operation, authority, and responsibilities of episcopal conferences are currently governed by the 1983 Code of Canon Law see especially canons 447 459 . The nature of episcopal conferences, and their magisterial authority ... diocese. Composition The IrishCatholic Bishops Conference is made up of the 26 Irish diocesan ..., as Primate of All Ireland, is the chairman of the IrishCatholic Bishops Conference. The current ... who is a bishop, though not always an ordinary . Presidency By convention, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese ... is president of the Irish Bishops Conference and thus principal spokesman. This tradition has ... and Murphy Report Murphy reports . See also Archbishops of Armagh Primate of All Ireland Catholic External links http www.catholicbishops.ie IrishCatholic Bishops Conference official website http www.gcatholic.com dioceses conference 052.htm Irish Episcopal Conference webpage . GCatholic.com website Category Bishops conferences Category Roman Catholic Church in Ireland de Irische Bischofskonferenz ... more details
Church of the Irish Martyrs , Ballyraine, Letterkenny ref http www.irishmartyrs.com irishmartyrs.php Church website ref Church of the Irish Martyrs, Ballycane, Naas ref http kildare.ie naasparish church of irish martyrs.htm Naas Parish website ref Church of the Irish Martyrs, Cromwell, Otago, New Zealand. See also English Reformation List of Catholic martyrs of the English Reformation References Catholic wstitle Irish Confessors and Martyrs New Catholic Dictionary http www.catholic forum.com saints ncd05034.htm Irish Martyrs Reflist External links http www.catholicireland.net pages index.php?nd 68&art 864 Catholicireland.net Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME IrishCatholic ... Ireland DEFAULTSORT IrishCatholic Martyrs Category Victims of Anti Catholic violence in Ireland Category Beatified people Category Catholic martyrs of the Early Modern era Irish Martyrs Category Executed Irish people Category 1537 deaths Category Article Feedback 5 pl 17 m czennik w irlandzkich ...Infobox martyrs name Irish Martyrs death date 1537 1714 martyred by English monarchy means of martyrdom feast day June 20 venerated in Roman Catholic Church image image size caption birth place death place Ireland beatified date September 27, 1992 beatified place beatified by Pope John Paul II IrishCatholic Martyrs were dozens of people who have been sanctified in varying degrees for dying for their Roman Catholic faith between 1537 and 1714 in Ireland. Causes Religious persecution of Catholics in Ireland began under Henry VIII of England King Henry VIII then Lordship of Ireland Lord of Ireland after his excommunication in 1533. The Irish Parliament adopted the Acts of Supremacy , establishing the king s supremacy over the Church. Some priests, bishops, and those who continued to pray for the pope ... of the Catholic Mary I of England Queen Mary in 1553 58, and in the early years of the reign of her ... to the danger of keeping such evidence. After Catholic Emancipation in 1829, the cause for Oliver ... more details
Wiktionary Irish may refer to Irish cuisine Ireland , an island in north western Europe, on which are located Northern Ireland , a constituent country of the United Kingdom Republic of Ireland , a sovereign state Irish language , a Goidelic language spoken in Ireland and by communities worldwide Irish Junior Cert , a subject of the Junior Cycle examination in Secondary schools in the Republic of Ireland Irish people , people of Irish ethnicity, people born in Ireland, people who hold Irish Citizenship Irish name , a first or last name See also Irish nationality law , determining who can become an Irish citizen List of Irish related topics Irish related topics , list of articles related to Ireland disambiguation Category Ireland da Irsk de Irisch os it Irlandese ja nn Irsk pt Irland s ru sco Erse simple Irish ... more details
Irish Catholicism may refer to Roman Catholicism in Ireland , the form of Catholicism practised by the Irish people IrishCatholic , a term used to describe people who are both Roman Catholic and Irish or of Irish descent disambig ... more details
of Ireland . Irish Colleges is the collective name used for approximately 34 centres of education for IrishCatholic clergy and lay people opened on continental Europe in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries ... for the education and training of Roman Catholic clergy. In 1983 the Irish College in Leuven was made ... Irish Colleges on the European Continent Catholic Encyclopedia http www.newadvent.org cathen 08157a.htm Irish College in Rome Catholic Encyclopedia http www.irishcollege.org official site of the only ...Image Gates of Irish College.JPG thumb right Image Irish College, Rome.jpg thumb right The Pontifical Irish College , Rome, Italy File Cartulaire douai 3 coll ges.JPG thumb right Colleges at University of Douai Image Col iste na nGael.Lov in.jpg thumb right Entrance to the Irish College, Leuven, Belgium ... the takeover of the country by the Protestant English state in the Tudor conquest of Ireland . Irish ... Irish Colleges were set up in Spain in the 1580s in Salamanca and Madrid under the supervision of the Jesuit priest James Archer Jesuit James Archer . There were several early Irish Colleges in Southern Netherlands . Irish College, Douai St. Patrick Irish college of Douai was founded in 1603 by Christopher Cusack, with the support of Philip III of Spain . The Irish College at Douai was integrated to the Faculty of Theology of the University of Douai in 1610. St Anthony s College, the Irish ... Mac Aingil and Flaithri Maolconaire , Irish Franciscan, theologian and aide to Aodh Ruadh Domhnaill . The College was founded under the patronage of Philip III of Spain . The Irish College in Paris ... frontcover Historical Sketches of the Ancient Native Irish and Their Descendants 1830 p.118 ... Laws against Roman Catholics in Ireland were relaxed. Irish colleges were important centres for the writing of Irish history and the preservation of Ireland s rich cultural traditions. M che l Cl irigh was sent from an Irish college to Ireland to compile the Annals of the Four Masters , an important ... more details
Infobox Ethnic group group Irish Chilean br small chileno irland s small caption small Notable Irish Chileans br Bernardo O Higgins , Patricio Aylwin small poptime Unknown popplace Chile langs Chilean Spanish Spanish . Minority speaks English language English and or Irish language Irish as first language. rels Roman Catholicism , Protestantism Presbyterianism , Anglican Church of the Southern Cone of America Episcopalianism et al. related Irish people , Irish American s, Irish Argentine s, Irish Brazilian s, Irish Canadian s, Irish Mexican s, Irish Uruguayan s, Scottish people , Scottish Chilean s. Irish Latin Americans Irish Chileans in Spanish language Spanish Irland s chileno or Hibernochileno , Irish language Irish Gael Sile nach are the inhabitants of Chile who either came from some part of the island of Ireland or are descendants of immigrants from there. Generally coming in the 18th century and early 19th century, the generally Roman Catholic Church CatholicIrish were seeking refuge from the oppression of the Protestantism Protestant run government of the Kingdom of Great Britain . Spain , being a Catholic power, enticed many Irish to move to Latin America. Immigration reduced later in the 19th century as Catholic Emancipation made emigration to a Catholic nation less of a vital ... for settlement. A large proportion of Irish Chileans are sheep farmers in the Magallanes region of the far south of the country, and the city of Punta Arenas has a large Irish foundation dating back to the 18th century. The most notable Irish Chilean, Bernardo O Higgins is often referred to as the Father of Chile , and is commemorated in many places in Chile. Notable Irish Chileans Patricio Aylwin ... Vicu a Mackenna politician, writer Irish grandmother See also Chileans in the United Kingdom Chile Ireland relations Ethnic groups in Chile Irish diaspora Category Irish diaspora Chilean Category Ethnic groups in Chile Category Chilean people of Irish descent es Inmigraci n brit nica en Chile ... more details
Irish Church may refer to the Anglican Church of Ireland the Roman Catholicism in Ireland Roman Catholic Church in Ireland See also Christianity in Ireland for general history and overview of Christianity in Ireland. disambig Long comment to avoid being listed on short pages ... more details
Infobox Ethnic group group Irish Brazilian br small Hiberno brasileiro small image caption poptime Unknown popplace Brazil Mainly in the states of State of S o Paulo S o Paulo and State of Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro langs Portuguese language Portuguese , English language English , and Irish language Irish rels Roman Catholic Church Roman Catholicism , Irreligion and Religion in Brazil others related c Other Brazilian people , White Brazilian s and specially Confederados , other American Brazilian s, English Brazilian s and Scottish Brazilian s Irish Latin Americans An Irish Brazilian Portuguese Irlando brasileiro or Hiberno brasileiro is a Brazilian person of full, partial, or predominantly Irish ancestry, or an Irish born person residing in Brazil. Many of Irish immigrants in Brazil had to change their last names into an easier kind of writing based in existing Portuguese names, replacing the O originally grandson . ref http www.irlandeses.org brazil.htm Brazil and Ireland Bot generated title ref See also Immigration to Brazil European immigration to Brazil Irish people References Reflist Demographics of Brazil Brazil topics Irish diaspora Category Ethnic groups in Brazil Category Brazilian people of Irish descent pt Irlando brasileiro ... more details
as the catholic population as a rough indication comprises 15 of the Scottish population. The Irish ...Original research date February 2011 Onesource date February 2011 Ethnic group group Irish Scots poptime ... language English Irish English Irish Scottish English Scottish , Scots language Scots , Scottish Gaelic , Irish language Irish rels Predominantly IrishCatholic Roman Catholic , Some Protestantism in Ireland Protestant related Scottish people Scottish , Irish people Irish Welsh people Welsh , Manx people Manx , Cornish people Cornish , Breton people Bretons , Ulster Scots people Scots Irish , Ulster Scots people Ulster Scots Irish Scots are people who live in Scotland who are of immediate or mixed ancestry including Ireland Irish ancestry. Although migration between Ireland and Scotland has an established history both ways owing to their close proximity, Irish migration to Scotland increased ... Ireland Great Famine . In this period, the Irish typically settled in the cities such as Edinburgh ... full or partial Irish descent. ref http www.scrol.gov.uk scrol warehouse NewWards ER CA.jsp Scotland s Census Results Online Ethnicity and Religion tables ref The term Irish Scots should not be confused with Ulster Scots people Scottish Irish , a term used to denote those in the Provinces of Ireland Irish province of Ulster who are descended from Scottish people Scots who settled there in heavy numbers during the Ulster Plantations . Famous Irish Scots include author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle , actors ... by the following quotations In our opinion, the Irish have as much right to come to this country ... for the same reason. Let us hear no more complaints about the influx of Irish having a bad effect on Scotland ... improved the Irish, but the native Scots who live among the Irish have got worse. It is difficult to imagine the effect the Irish immigrants will have upon the morals and habits of the Scottish people ... immigrants irish in scotland index irish scotland.shtml dd dl Difficulties also arose due to differences ... more details
Infobox Magazine title Irish Monthly image file image size image caption company based Dublin frequency Monthly paid circulation unpaid circulation total circulation language English language English category Literature , social issues , popular culture , religion previous editor Rev. Matthew Russell, S.J. firstdate 1873 finaldate 1954 country Ireland website issn The Irish Monthly was an Irish people Irish Roman CatholicCatholic magazine founded in Dublin , Ireland in July 1873. Until 1920 it had the sub title A Magazine of General Literature . It was founded by Rev. Matthew Russell, S.J., 1834 1912 , who was the editor for almost forty years from 1873. The first two years of the magazine were difficult, but in 1875 Rosa Mulholland arrived to help out, followed shortly by friends of Father ... helped put the magazine on a firm footing. ref Katherine Tynan in the Irish Monthly 1912, p. 554 ref ... John O Leary and his sister Ellen. These were members of the Irish cultural and nationalistic circles ... contributors, among them Mary Fagan and Frances Wynne. Among the writers discovered by the Irish ... Russell, Poets I have Known VIII Alice Furlong, The Irish Monthly, Vol. 36, No. 421 July 1908 ... first Henry year 1998 title A Dictionary of Irish Biography, 3rd Edition page 126 location Dublin publisher Gill and MacMillan isbn 0 7171 2945 4 ref The Irish Monthly ceased publication in 1954 ... first Robert year 1996 title The Oxford Companion to Irish Literature location Oxford ISBN 0198661584 Catholic External links http www.archive.org stream irishmonthlymag03unkngoog irishmonthlymag03unkngoog djvu.txt Irish Monthly, 1875 http www.archive.org stream irishmonthlyvol02russgoog irishmonthlyvol02russgoog djvu.txt Irish Monthly, 1886 http www.archive.org stream irishmonthly05unkngoog irishmonthly05unkngoog djvu.txt Irish Monthly, 1890 DEFAULTSORT Irish Monthly Category Media in Dublin city ... Category Irish magazines Category Magazines disestablished in 1954 ... more details
and Harbour Grace to the fact that he was fluently bilingual in English and Irish. The Roman Catholic bishops also realized the importance of Irish speaking priests in letters to Dublin , Bishop James ...For Irish Language Scottish Gaelic in Canada Canadian Gaelic Infobox language name Newfoundland Irish ... Goidelic languages Goidelic fam5 Irish language Irish map Newfoundland Irish Shore.png mapcaption The Irish Shore of Newfoundland island Newfoundland s Avalon Peninsula . iso3 no ISO code for this dialect Newfoundland Irish lang ga Gaeilge Thalamh an isc is an extinct dialect of the Irish language ... Irish , as spoken in the southeast of Ireland , due to mass immigration from the counties Waterford , Wexford , Kilkenny , Tipperary , and County Cork Cork . Irish settlement of Newfoundland Seven ... each one. The colonists were primarily Welsh language Welsh peasants but there were also many Irish peasants who usually only spoke Irish language Irish . The language was commonly spoken in rural areas until the mid 20th century. There is evidence to suggest that as many as 90 of the Irish immigrants to Newfoundland in the 17th and 18th centuries only spoke Irish. Citation needed date February 2007 Court records show that defendants often required Irish speaking interpreters, which indicates that the dominant language in many areas of the Avalon Peninsula was Irish rather than English language ... Newfoundland The Most Irish Place Outside of Ireland , Brian McGinn, the Irish Diaspora Studies scholarly ... necessary that he should speak Irish. ref name mcginn Current status A 2001 census report indicated ... Gaelic in Canada . Scholars at Memorial University of Newfoundland concluded that Newfoundland Irish ... Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage , Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage Web site ref See also Irish language outside Ireland Irish Newfoundlanders List of extinct languages of North America Scottish ... vp01.cfm?outfit ids&folder 158&paper 159 Newfoundland The Most Irish Place Outside of Ireland http ... more details
in Ireland, and many Irish Australians &mdash Catholic and Protestant &mdash rose to positions ... northern or republican, Protestant or Catholic, and how Australian manifestations of the Irish festival ... changed, however, in the 1830s with the growth of wealthy IrishCatholic emancipists and the introduction of IrishCatholic priests. These factors gave rise to conflicts and tensions that were to remain ... in 2004, Irish Australians are, by religion, 46.2 Roman Catholic , 15.3 Anglican , 13.5 other Christian ...Use dmy dates date January 2012 Use Australian English date January 2012 Infobox Ethnic group group Irish ... Stynes . Paul Keating . Mick Fanning . Lisa Gerrard . Damien Leith small poptime 72,050 Irish born, 2006 br 1,803,741 self declared Irish ancestry, 2006 popplace Sydney , Melbourne , Brisbane langs Australian English , Irish language Irish rels Catholic Church Roman Catholic , Protestantism , Atheism , Agnosticism related Irish people , Anglo Celtic Australian s, Scottish Australian s, Welsh Australian s, Cornish Australian s Irish Australians lang ga Gael Astr lach have played a long and enduring ... figure of the total number of Australians with an Irish people Irish background. At the 2006 Australian Census Census , 1,803,741 residents identified themselves as having Irish ancestry either alone ... of the largest number of responses. However this figure does not include Australians with an Irish ... Embassy in Dublin states that up to 30 percent of the population claim some degree of Irish ancestry ... Embassy ref Demographic history Around 40,000 Irish convicts were transported to Australia between 1791 and 1867, many for political activity, including those who had participated in the Irish Rebellion ... year also led to an Irish revolt. Both risings were soon crushed. In these decades, the Irish language was the main language of Irish prisoners, and many Irish were flogged or killed by fellow convicts ... to Western Australia , where the Catalpa rescue of Irish radicals off Rockingham was a memorable episode ... more details
Church of Canada United , Roman Catholic related Irish people Irish , Irish American s, Ulster Scots ...&pg PA165&dq irishcatholic protestant 1931 census intitle canada&hl en&ei 5RYMTt CCvHUiAKtuaXpDQ&sa .... However, most CatholicIrish after 1850 usually headed to the U.S., England and Australia. ref Elliott ... , see below for more information . The CatholicIrish in Canada felt discrimination from Protestants ... in the U.S. in 1866 and 1870. Although the IrishCatholic community in Canada did in part condemn ... was founded by the Jesuits to serve Montreal s mostly Irish English speaking Catholic community in 1896 ... Catholic religion also allowed Irish immigrants to intermarry with French Canadians , and children would ... numbers of Irish, a growing number Catholic, were venturing to Canada to obtain work on projects ... primarily Roman Catholic. Crop failures in 1867 halted the road program near the Irish settlements ... renewal, up to the 1970s. This was also the case in other Canadian cities with significant IrishCatholic ... of Labor caused the Orange and CatholicIrish in Toronto to resolve their generational hatred and set about to form a common working class culture. This theory presumes that IrishCatholic culture was of little ... work, mostly since World War II . In 1877, a breakthrough in Irish Canadian Protestant Catholic relations ..., Ontario Irish Benevolent Society , a brotherhood of Irishmen and women of both Catholic and Protestant ... provincial riding one Catholic and one Protestant was ended. Irish in Newfoundland Main Irish Newfoundlanders ..., the features and colouring, the predominant Catholic religion, the prevalence of Irish music even the dialect ... in that area are from the Highlands and many are Catholic making it hard to distinguish Irish and Scottish people. CatholicIrish settlement in Nova Scotia was traditionally restricted to the urban Halifax Urban Area Halifax area. Halifax, founded in 1749, was estimated to be about 16 IrishCatholic ... to overcome opposition to the Irish. ref Terrence M. Punch, The IrishCatholic, Halifax s First ... more details
Irish Rebellion may refer to The Irish Bruce Wars 1315 1318 , an attempt by members of the O Neill clan backed by a Scottish and Irish army to make Edward Bruce the High King of Ireland. They were supported by Edward s older brother, Robert the Bruce, King of Scotland. The Geraldine Rebellion 1534 and the Thomas FitzGerald, 10th Earl of Kildare FitzGerald Rebellion against Henry VIII of England 1535 to 1537, having to do with who was supreme head of the church The Desmond Rebellions , which occurred in the 1560s, 1570s and 1580s in Munster Tyrone s Rebellion also known as the Nine Years War Ireland from 1594 to 1603, predominantly in Ulster O Doherty s Rebellion , 1607 The Irish Rebellion of 1641 , a conflict between the Roman Catholic native Gaelic Irish and Hiberno Normans, and Protestant settlers The Irish Rebellion of 1798 , a republican uprising against British rule of Ireland The United Irish Uprising of 1800, an uprising against British rule of Newfoundland The 1803 Irish rebellion led by Robert Emmet The Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848 , also called The Famine Rebellion of 1848 The Fenian Rising of 1867 The Easter Rising of 1916, a nationalist uprising against British rule of Ireland The Irish War of Independence 1919 1921 , a guerrilla war between the original Irish Republican Army and the British administration in Ireland, resulting in the creation of the Irish Free State, now known as the Republic of Ireland The S Plan or Sabotage Campaign IRA 1939 1940 Northern Campaign IRA 1942 1944 The Border Campaign IRA 1956 1962 The Troubles 1968 1998 See also List of Irish uprisings disambig de Irische Rebellion ... more details
Catholic Church Catholic priesthood of Britain remains Irish Citation needed date March ... also expressed the opinion that they were saving the souls of the CatholicIrish by settling them in Protestant ... John. Most of these Irish were Catholic, who changed the complexion of the Loyalist city. A large ... Irish as well as the music, traditions, religion Roman Catholic , and the love of Ireland itself ... image of an Irish immigrant is led to a certain extent by racist and anti Roman CatholicCatholic ... Australia first became what amounted to the Australian IrishCatholic slogan . These Australians ... 2011 enrolled in Catholic schools that were, in large part, established by IrishCatholic religious ... Irish dominance over the English speaking Catholic Church in the 19th century. The establishment of an Irish ... File night train with reaper by brian whelan.jpg thumb Night Train with Reaper by London Irish artist Brian Whelan from the book Myth of Return , 2007 The Irish diaspora lang ga Diasp ra na nGael consists of Irish emigrants and their descendants in countries such as the United Kingdom, the United ... , 607 ref Counting those who went to Britain, between 9 and 10 million Irish people emigrated after ... Irish born people were living abroad. By the 21st century, an estimated 80 million people worldwide claim some Irish descent among them are 41 million Americans who claim Irish as their primary ethnicity ... 1185230.jpg 270px thumb The Bridge of Tears Droichead na nDeor in Irish language Irish in County ... before saying goodbye. The term Irish diaspora is open to many interpretations. One, preferred by the government of Ireland, is defined in legal terms the Irish diaspora are all persons of Irish nationality who habitually reside outside of the island of Ireland. This includes Irish citizens who have emigrated abroad and their children, who are Irish citizens by descent under Irish law. It also includes their grandchildren in cases where they were registered as Irish citizens in the Foreign ... more details
to Carbonear , an area still known as the Irish Shore . There were more CatholicIrish people Irish ... Institution Orange Order to their new home. However, the majority of the Irish were Roman Catholic ... one of the most active and influential fraternal societies in St. John s until the 1990s. IrishCatholic ... surrounded the age of Catholic Emancipation in Ireland and Newfoundland. Culture In Newfoundland, the Irish ... Catholic . To Newfoundland, the Irish gave the still familiar family names of southeast Ireland Wade ... Newfoundland lang ga Talamh an isc , many Newfoundlanders are of Ireland Irish descent. According to the Statistics Canada 2006 census, 21.5 of Newfoundlanders claim Irish ancestry other major ... Canada date 2009 07 28 ref The family names, the features and colouring, the predominant Catholic ... of Irish music  even the accents of the people in these areas  are so reminiscent of rural Ireland that Irish author Tim Pat Coogan has described Newfoundland as the most Irish place in the world ... The Story of the Irish Diaspora , Palgrave Macmillan, 2002. ref History The Irish migrations to Newfoundland ... . A further hint of what one scholar has termed a diaspora of Irish fishermen dates from 1608, when ... 1670, and particularly between 1750 and 1830, Newfoundland received large numbers of Irish immigrants. Image Newfoundland Irish Shore.png right thumb 250px Approximate location of the Irish Shore on the Avalon Peninsula. These migrations were seasonal or temporary. Most Irish migrants were young men ... in the 1770s and 1780s when more than 100 ships and 5,000 men cleared Irish ports for the fishery. The exodus from Ulster to the USA excepted, it was the most substantial movement of Irish people Irish across the Atlantic in the 18th century. Some went on to other North America n destinations ... between Ireland and Newfoundland due to fisheries and trade. As a result, the Newfoundland Irish ... from its inception, a small number of young Irish women joined the migration. They tended to stay ... more details
, IrishCatholic nobility, soldiers, and clergy would serve Catholic Monarchs in France , Spain , and the Low Countries . Nearly 35,000 Irish served in the French military in the seventeenth century. By 1700 there were approximately one hundred Irish born families among the 2,500 families registered ... A Z i8 2 quote ref IrishCatholic settlers also opened of new agricultural areas in the recently ... ref name cite web author title Irish radicalism and the Roman Catholic Church in Quebec and Ireland ... s IrishCatholic Church led by priests such as Father Patrick Dowd, they would establish their own ... rule in Ireland and Canada, and espoused anti Catholic views. D Arcy McGee , an Irish Montrealer ... in 1868. Post Confederation & Modern Day Quebec English language IrishCatholic institutions continued ... to serve Montreal s mostly Irish English speaking Catholic community in 1896. St. Mary s Hospital ...Image StPatQueens.jpg right thumb Saint Patrick s Day Parade in Montreal Irish Quebecers lang fr Irlando Qu b cois are residents of the Canada Canadian province of Quebec who have Irish people Irish ancestry ... Irish people Irish descent in Quebec, representing 5.5 of the population. ref http www12.statcan.ca ... that about 40 of Quebecers have Irish ancestry on at least one side of their family tree. ref Ta eb ... 406,085 Quebecers who identified themselves as Irish representing 5.5 of the population. This represents .... In the Montreal region, there are 161,235 Irish, with about 78,175 48.5 of these being English ... Irish culture and community organizations are mostly kept alive by the English speaking Quebecer English speaking population such as the United Irish Societies of Montreal ref United Irish Societies ... in Montreal as far back as 1759 by Irish soldiers in the Montreal Garrison following the British ... Pidgeon publisher United Irish Societies of Montreal date 2007 07 03 url http www.montrealirishparade.com history.htm ref History New France 1608 1763 In the seventeenth century, Irish residing in France ... more details
English , Irish language Irish rels Roman Catholic br Presbyterian br Episcopal Church United ... IrishCatholic 18th to mid 19th century According to the Dictionary of American History , ref Kutler ... percent of them Catholic, came to America in the 1600s, while 100,000 more Irish Catholics arrived ... to refer to themselves as Scotch Irish to distinguish them from the predominantly Catholic Church Catholic ... http memory.loc.gov learn features immig irish2.html title IrishCatholic Immigration to America publisher ... through predominantly Catholic neighborhoods. 63 citizens, mostly Irish Catholics, were massacred ... IrishCatholic immigrants went directly to the cities, mill towns, and railroad or canal construction ... of IrishCatholic women took jobs as maids in hotels and private households. citation needed date January ... on average to their neighbors. citation needed date January 2011 After 1945, the CatholicIrish consistently ... The disproportionate number of Irish American Catholic women who entered the job market as teachers .... Irish Americans today are both Catholic and Protestant. The Protestants ancestors ... century. Irish leaders have been prominent in the Catholic Church in the United States for over ... identify themselves as Irish , 51 said they were Protestant and 36 Catholic. In the South, Protestants ... of those claiming Irish origin are Catholic, while 39 are Protestant. ref 13 of the Irish gave other ... Culture 2006 16 1 25 54. ref IrishCatholic and Irish Protestant relations details Orange ... John authorlink coauthors title The IrishCatholic Diaspora in America publisher Catholic University ... between Catholic and Protestant Irish immigrants, such as the Orange Riots in New York City in 1824 ... fought out between Irish Protestant and Catholic immigrants. After this the activities of the Orange ... thumb Officers and men of the IrishCatholic 69th Infantry Regiment New York 69th New York Volunteer ... IrishCatholic community grew to support Fitzpatrick s assertion of the bishop s control ... more details
the Irish language . Catholic teachers were employed as few Protestants knew Irish. These teachers ... than 30,000 books, mostly in Irish, to teachers and scholars. ref harvnb Blaney 1996 p 84 ref The Catholic ...about The Honourable The Irish Society which was involved in the Plantation of Ulster The Honourable The Irish Society The Irish Society , or to give it its full name, The Irish society for promoting the scriptural education and religious instruction of the Irish speaking population chiefly through the medium ... on aspects of the Bible which they believed contradicted Catholic teaching. Members of the Society placed emphasis on education, which would allow the Irish natives access to the scriptures ... 53 ref At Mason s suggestion the committee of the Irish Society founded in 1844 two Bedell scholarships and a premium in Dublin University for encouraging the study of the Irish language. He was mainly instrumental in the establishment there of a professorship of Irish. In 1848 the Irish Society in partnership with the controversial Irish Church Missions Irish Church Missions to Roman Catholics ICM ... Alexander Dallas , and his anti Catholic tirades, which caused much bitterness in the areas, as well as with members of the Irish Society particularly in Trinity College. In 1861 the society was instrumental in the translation into Irish of the Book of Common Prayer Leabhar na nUrnaighe Comhchoitchoinn ... cite book last Blaney first Roger title Presbyterians and the Irish Language year 1996 ref harv ... C ad Bliain 1871 1971 Stair agus Seanchas Phar iste An Fheirt araigh ref harv language Irish cite journal last hAil n first T. year 1968 title The Irish Society and Tadhg Coinniall in journal Studia ... and Facts Afforded by the History of the Irish Society Respecting the Duty of Employing the Irish ... Henry Joseph Monck title History of the Origin and Progress of the Irish Society Established for Promoting the Education of the Native Irish through the Medium of Their Own Language location Dublin ... more details
Infobox newspaper name The Irish Family logo image caption type conservative, religion orientated format weekly owners Thomas Keaveney founder publisher Nation Communications and Media Ltd editor Lorcan Mac Math na chiefeditor assoceditor maneditor newseditor managingeditordesign campuseditor campuschief opeditor sportseditor photoeditor staff foundation political language ceased publication September 2008 headquarters Dublin circulation sister newspapers ISSN oclc website The Irish Family later The Irish Family Press was an Ireland Irish weekly Roman Catholic newspaper from 1992 to 2008, providing news and commentary about the Roman Catholic Church and social issues. It was traditional Catholic in outlook, supporting the Tridentine Mass and critical of the European Union. It was originally founded as The Democrat in 1992 after the X Case . Shortly thereafter it changed its title to The Irish Democrat , which was later changed to The Irish Family to avoid confusion with the paper of the same name run by the Connolly Association. In its first years it was run by Dick Hogan, a Mullingar based local newspaper proprietor and Catholic activist. It published a regular column on Marian devotion by the theologian Fr Michael O Carroll. It was strongly hostile to European integration and supported attempts to establish an independent Catholic political party. Other contributors included Donna Marie Cooper O Boyle and Ann Marie Madden. Editor until early 2006 was Gerry McGeough , an IRA activist who until 2003 was on the Sinn F in executive, and who had spent a number of years in prison for various arms offences. ref cite web title Behind the Mask The Ira and Sinn F in author url http ... ended 30 September 2005. ref http www.thepost.ie archives 2007 0506 trust believes in irishcatholic 23362.html ref It announced in August 2008 that it was ceasing printing and would go online ... published in Ireland Irish Family, The Category Media in the Republic of Ireland Category Publications ... more details
Infobox newspaper name Irish Examiner logo Image Irish Examiner logo.svg 250px type Daily newspaper format Broadsheet foundation 1841 owners Thomas Crosbie Holdings political Centrist headquarters Lapp s Quay, Cork city Cork . editor Tim Vaughan website http www.irishexaminer.ie www.irishexaminer.ie The Irish Examiner , formerly The Cork Examiner and then The Examiner , is an Republic of Ireland Irish national daily newspaper which primarily circulates in the Munster region surrounding its base in Cork city Cork , though it is available throughout the country. Its main national rivals are The Irish Times , and the Irish Independent . The paper was founded by John Francis Maguire under the title The Cork Examiner in 1841 in support of the Catholic Emancipation and tenant rights work of Daniel O Connell . ref Ireland in the Nineteenth Century by Leon Litvack, Glenn Hooper.Four Courts Press, 2000. pg.38 ref Though originally appearing under The Cork Examiner title, it has re branded in recent years to The Examiner , and subsequently The Irish Examiner to appeal to a more national readership. The newspaper is part of the Thomas Crosbie Holdings group. As of 2004 , its Chief Executive is Thomas J. Murphy, and its editor is Tim Vaughan. ref Europa World Year Book 200 4.Taylor & Francis Group,2004. See section Ireland The Press ,pg. 2223 ref The newspaper was based at Academy Street, Cork ..., however, has experienced a larger decline that other Irish broadsheet newspapers. According ... since the same period in 2007. References references Further reading Irish Media A Critical History Since 1922 By John Horgan. Routledge, 2001. Remember When Pictures from the Irish Examiner Archive ... website Irish Examiner Media in County Cork Irish national newspapers Category Newspapers published in the Republic of Ireland Category media in County Cork Category Thomas Crosbie Holdings de Irish Examiner fr Irish Examiner ga Irish Examiner pl Irish Examiner ... more details
Irish Pine was the name of three ships operated by Irish Shipping Irish Shipping Ltd SS Irish Pine 1919 SS Irish Pine 1948 MV Irish Pine shipindex ... more details
of the population of Coatbridge have IrishCatholic backgrounds are based upon census figures, factors such as high number of Catholic church parishes in the town nine and the fact that there are currently two Catholic secondary schools and one non denominational school. Religious statistics gathered ... demand and as result the town became a popular destination for vast numbers of Irish people Irish ... Services Dept. 1985 Peter Drummond. P.7 ref History of the Irish community in Coatbridge The Irish .... T.C. Smout. Fontana Press 1997 ref . The 1851 census notes that the Irish born population in Coatbridge ... and Protestants. ref The Irish in Scotland James Handley, 1962, Burns. p.255 6 ref The New York Times ... ref According to James Handley, ref The Irish in Scotland, 1962 ref by 1901, the percentage of Irish .... Handley s figures excluded the offspring of Irish born migrants and Handley argues that taking into consideration the culturally higher birth rates of IrishCatholic families at this time the true figure of Irish population in Coatbridge at this time was in fact much greater. In the late 19th century the largest and most generous Irish Home Rule Movement Irish Home Rule organization in United Kingdom Britain was found in Coatbridge. ref Religion and Identity The Irish World Wide Volume 5 Page 158 by Patrick O Sullivan 1996 ref ref The Irish in Britain From The Earliest Times To the Fall ... Hamilton both refer to the Irish in Coatbridge. Modern day writer Des Dillon also writes at length about the descendants of the 19th century Irish immigrants in present day Coatbridge. The formation of Whifflet Shamrock in 1888 suggests an attempt to set up a team to represent the Coatbridge Irish ... election the Irish Anti Partition League put up a candidate in the constituency covering Coatbridge ... and Clydebank was voted the least Scottish town in Scotland due to having the highest percentage of Irish names in the country. Reportedly more than 28 of adults in Coatbridge had names with Irish origins ... more details