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  1. Hugh O'Neill, Earl of Tyrone (Irish: Aodh Mór Ó Néill; literally Hugh the Great O'Neill; c. 1550 – 20 July 1616) was an Irish Gaelic lord and key figure of the Irish Nine Years' War.

  2. 20 de jul. de 1998 · Hugh O’Neill, 2nd earl of Tyrone was an Irish rebel who, from 1595 to 1603, led an unsuccessful Roman Catholic uprising against English rule in Ireland. The defeat of O’Neill and the conquest of his province of Ulster was the final step in the subjugation of Ireland by the English.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. A biography of Hugh O'Neill, the 2nd earl of Tyrone, who led the Gaelic resistance against the English crown in the late 16th century. Learn about his upbringing, early life, wars, marriages, and legacy.

  4. Hugh O’Neill allowed three months to elapse before he appeared at Belgoley, a hill north of Kinsale, a mile from the Anglo-Irish camp. Both he and O’Donnell had wasted much time on the way south in plundering and burning the districts under Anglo-Irish rule and influence.

  5. generations — most of them academics — have been writing of Hugh O’Neill, and for an interrogation of some of their assumptions and conclusions. I The terms of the mid-twentieth-century discourse had been set in 1942 by O’Faolain’s biography, The Great O’Neill, where he credited J. K. Graham, who

  6. Hugh O’Neill (born c. 1605, Spanish Netherlands—died c. 1660, Spain?) was an Irish general, nephew of the celebrated Owen Roe O’Neill. He was a major Irish commander against the English parliamentary forces of Oliver Cromwell.

  7. 10 de jul. de 2024 · This investigation of the politics of history-writing down the centuries will show that most authors who wrote of Hugh O'Neill previous to the late twentieth century sought to present him either as a champion of their preferred definition of Irish nationalism or as an exemplar of Irish ingratitude.