This extensive longitudinal study investigates the Meredith family and associated people throughout their 350-year involvement in County Sligo near Ireland's north-western corner. It carefully monitors their likely origins in Wales, subsequent activities in London society and the Caribbean plantations and their transition, associations and unions with local Irish families into the twentieth century. Drawn from surviving source material scattered throughout Europe and North America, perspectives into their lives augment new hypotheses that, if further sources can be unearthed in the future, will add much to our understanding of the Irish early-modern era. An intricate web of circumstances describes the family's arrival in Ireland, connection...
The Larkin DNA Project undertook a sampling effort in 2009 focused on men whose ancestors came from ...
<p>This dataset provides a list of surnames that are reliably Irish and that can be used for identif...
The sixteenth century is critical to our reading of Ireland's subsequent colonial and indeed postcol...
This extensive longitudinal study investigates the Meredith family and associated people throughout ...
"Irish family history is difficult to research, but not impossible. This book describes two familie...
This thesis examines the experience of the Blakes of Ballyglunin from 1641 until 1777. It presents a...
This thesis is a study of three diverse Catholic families that received land during the mid seventee...
This thesis examines the political development o f County Mayo during the years 1780- 1830, through ...
Between the 18th and 19th centuries, the prosperity of Irish Catholic Tenants ebbed and flowed with ...
Excavations at the Mary M. B. Wakefield Estate in rural Milton, Massachusetts produced an assemblage...
Ireland has a fascinating history of ancient kingdoms and more modern migrations. Furthermore, Irela...
This thesis analyses family relationships within a minority genre in Connaught, or closely associate...
This is the story of a County Kilkenny family over one hundred and one years (1816- 1917) with a pa...
This thesis is about a class of literate professionals that served as hereditary brehons, poets and ...
The Irish trading post, and its associated sugar plantations on the Danish island of Saint Croix dur...
The Larkin DNA Project undertook a sampling effort in 2009 focused on men whose ancestors came from ...
<p>This dataset provides a list of surnames that are reliably Irish and that can be used for identif...
The sixteenth century is critical to our reading of Ireland's subsequent colonial and indeed postcol...
This extensive longitudinal study investigates the Meredith family and associated people throughout ...
"Irish family history is difficult to research, but not impossible. This book describes two familie...
This thesis examines the experience of the Blakes of Ballyglunin from 1641 until 1777. It presents a...
This thesis is a study of three diverse Catholic families that received land during the mid seventee...
This thesis examines the political development o f County Mayo during the years 1780- 1830, through ...
Between the 18th and 19th centuries, the prosperity of Irish Catholic Tenants ebbed and flowed with ...
Excavations at the Mary M. B. Wakefield Estate in rural Milton, Massachusetts produced an assemblage...
Ireland has a fascinating history of ancient kingdoms and more modern migrations. Furthermore, Irela...
This thesis analyses family relationships within a minority genre in Connaught, or closely associate...
This is the story of a County Kilkenny family over one hundred and one years (1816- 1917) with a pa...
This thesis is about a class of literate professionals that served as hereditary brehons, poets and ...
The Irish trading post, and its associated sugar plantations on the Danish island of Saint Croix dur...
The Larkin DNA Project undertook a sampling effort in 2009 focused on men whose ancestors came from ...
<p>This dataset provides a list of surnames that are reliably Irish and that can be used for identif...
The sixteenth century is critical to our reading of Ireland's subsequent colonial and indeed postcol...