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  1. Mabel Bagenal (c. 1571 – December 1595) was an Anglo-Irish noblewoman and Countess of Tyrone, often referred to as the "Helen of the Elizabethan Wars". Life. Mabel Bagenal was born around 1571 in Newry. She was the youngest child of Sir Nicholas Bagenal, a prominent Staffordshire soldier, and his wife Eleanor Griffith of Penrhyn, Wales

  2. Bagenal (O'Neill), Mabel (c.1571–95), countess of Tyrone , was born in Newry, sixth daughter and youngest among eleven children of Sir Nicholas Bagenal (qv), marshal of the army in Ireland, and Eleanor Griffith of Penrhyn, Wales.

  3. O'Neill is the central character in Brian Friel's play Making History (1989), which is concerned largely with his third marriage to Mabel Bagenal; Friel describes the marriage as a genuine if ill-fated love affair. In the original production, O'Neill was played by actor Stephen Rea.

  4. Bagenal, Mabel (c. 1571–1595) Irish noblewoman. Born around 1571; died at Dungannon in December 1595; daughter of Marshal Bagenal, leader of the army in Ireland; sister of Henry Bagenal (c. 1556–1598); married Hugh O'Neill (1550–1616), 3rd Baron Dungannon and 2nd earl of Tyrone, in August 1591.

  5. 26 de ago. de 2018 · Biography. Mabel Bagenal was the daughter of Nicholas Bagenal and Ellen Griffith. Her brother, Henry Bagenal was the ambitious Marshall of Ireland, and rival of Hugh O'Neill for control of Ulster, both negotiating to be named Lord President of Ulster.

    • Female
    • Hugh O'neill
  6. 14 de jul. de 2011 · One possible identity for the mystery skeleton is that of Mabel Bagenal, O’Neill’s third wife, a protestant beauty who was known as Ireland’s ‘Helen of Troy’ and became O’Neill’s implacable enemy, before dying in Dungannon in 1591.

  7. 4 de ago. de 2016 · Regrettably this play exaggerated the most egregious aspects of Ó Faoláin's book; furthermore it put O'Neill's marriage to Mabel Bagenal, the so-called "Helen of the Elizabethan wars", at its...