Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. In his approach, Aiken not only faced considerable political opposition in the Irish legislature but also posed a challenge to western assumptions about Irish loyalties within the United Nations and the international community in general. Frank Aiken was born in Camlough Co. Armagh in 1898.

  2. Frank Aiken owed his early eminence to military rather than political leadership. He was commandant of the 4th Northern Division of the IRA during the War of Independence and, though he tried to resist action and affect a truce, was driven to undertake the most daring and spectacular feats of the Irish Civil War.

  3. See Full PDFDownload PDF. Frank Aiken: Family, early life and the revolutionary period, 1898-1921 Eoin Magennis Introduction Frank Aiken lived his life in the public eye for six decades, from the age of sixteen until his retirement in 1973. Despite this he tended to avoid interviews, speaking to researchers rather than the media and always ...

  4. 23 de mai. de 2023 · This group included Frank Aiken, Tom Barry, Tom Crofts, P.J. Ruttledge and Seán MacSwiney. Tom Barry, seen here shortly after the War of Independence. Image courtesy of Kilmainham Gaol Museum/OPW ...

  5. Frank Aiken: Nationalist and Internationalist. € 24.99 – € 44.99. Bryce Evans & Stephen Kelly. A fascinating biography of one of the most significant and controversial Irish politicians and revolutionaries of the twentieth century. Aiken’s remarkable career as a military commander, politician and, eventually, statesman on the ...

  6. 28 de jul. de 2016 · 55 ‘Address delivered by Frank Aiken, Irish Minister for Coordination of Defense Measures, over a Columbia Broadcasting System Network, June 21,1941,9.15 to 9.30 P.M.’ (AFINP). 56 56 New York Daily News , 24 Apr. 1941, clipping (AFINP).

  7. Ireland: Frank Aiken’s Early Steps to Contain Nuclear Proliferation Mervyn O’Driscoll Introduction The Irish Minister for External Affairs Frank Aiken’s crusade for a nuclear non-proliferation resolution (1958 and 1961) was a component of his wider policy of addressing critical international problems, but it was also an assertion of Ireland’s role as a middle power.