FACTOID # 59: People might eat oats when they're hungry, but people from Hungary don't eat oats.
 
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Encyclopedia > O'Flaherty

O'Flaherty is a major Irish clan, originally called the Muintir Mhurchadha, of which the name Ua Flaithbertaig became the name of its ruling dynasty. Their home territory was Maigh Seola, and the Ua Flaithbertaig were based on a crannog on an island in Loch Cime (now Lough Hackett). The territory they controlled ran from Headford and Tuam in the north to Dún Bhun na Gaillimhe (later the town of Galway) in the south. For other uses, see Clan (disambiguation). ... Maigh Seola was a term used to describe the land along the east shore of Lough Corrib, bounded by the river Clare which formed the border with the Hy-Many vassel kingdom of Soghain. ... WGS-84 (GPS) Coordinates: 53. ... WGS-84 (GPS) Coordinates: , Irish Grid Reference M300256 Statistics Province: Connacht County: Dáil Éireann: Galway West European Parliament: North-West Dialling Code: 091 Postal District(s): G Area: 50. ...


Following the Anglo-Norman invasion of Connachta rebellion in early 1200s the dynasty and related clans were expelled into Iar Connacht; their leader at the time was Aed Ua Flaithbertaigh, who died in 1236. They remained the area's rulers until the 1650s, when much of their lands were confiscated by the English Commonwealth. However, bearers of the name are still to be found in great numbers here and in other parts of County Galway. Three members of the family have served as Mayor of Galway in recent decades. Iar Chonnachta (longer form - Iarthar Chonnachta) (alternative spelling- Iar Chonnacht) covers the portion of County Galway west of Loch nOirbsean (Loch Corrib) and the Gaillimh / Galway River (better known as the River Corrib) and the portion of County Mayo in the barony of Ross. ... // Events May 6 - Roger of Wendover, Benedictine monk and chronicler of St Albanss Abbey dies. ... Significant Events and Trends World Leaders King Frederick III of Denmark (1648 - 1670). ... Motto: PAX QUÆRITUR BELLO (English: Peace is sought through war) Anthem: Multiple unofficial anthems Capital London Language(s) English Government Republic Lord Protector  - 1649-1658 Oliver Cromwell Legislature Rump Parliament Barebones Parliament History  - Declaration of Commonwealth May 19, 1649  - Declaration of Breda April 4, 1660 Area 130,395... The Mayor of Galway have existed, with a break of ninety-seven years, since the office was inaugurated in December 1485 as the result of a patent solicited by merchants of Galway from King Richard III in London. ...


O'Flaherty is the anglicized version of the Gaelic Ó Flaithbheartaigh, which is commonly translated as "bright ruler". The clan motto is Fortuna Favet Fortibus, or "Fortune Favors the Bold". There are many incarnations of the name, including Flaherty,Fleharty, Flaverty, Faherty, Feherty, Fairty, Laverty, and Lafferty. The O'Flahertys were war-like, as evidenced by the sign which is said to have hung over the west gate of the city of Galway: "from the ferocious O'Flahertys may God protect us". Unlike their merchant neighbours in this Anglo-Norman city, the O'Flahertys kept the Brehon Laws, in which The O'Flaherty, the clan leader or taoiseach was chosen from among the extended family of the clan chief as opposed to his eldest son, as would be the case in English Law. The O'Flahertys controlled their lands from a series of castles, the largest of which, Aughnanure, near Oughterard, is open to the public today. Anglicized refers to foreign words, often surnames, that are changed from a foreign language into English. ... This article is about the modern Goidelic language. ... For other uses, see Motto (disambiguation). ... Fortune favours the bold or fortune favours the brave is a phrase derived from the Latin saying fortes fortuna adjuvat. The phrase means that luck is likely to be granted by the goddess Fortuna to the side of someone who is willing to take risks. ... The Brehon Laws were statutes that governed everyday life and politics in Ireland until the Norman invasion of 1171 (the word Brehon is an Anglicisation of breitheamh (earlier brithem), the Irish word for a judge). ... Oughterard (Uachtar Ard in Irish) is a small town on the banks of the Owenriff River close to the south shore of Lough Corrib in County Galway, Ireland. ...


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OFlaherty (2868 words)
What O'Flaherty actually wanted to put across is that precisely the suffering and the destruction that the Irish people experienced during those four years led to the formation of a new Ireland, of a new Irish people, willing and able to stand up for their rights, for justice and independence.
O'Flaherty, instead, views the Famine as one part of Irish history and is rather interested in its effects on the present.
What O'Flaherty wanted to put across is that every kind of effort the Irish people make to free themselves from their misery - be it physical force against their oppressors or emigration to America - is better than just fall in a state of agony and resign themselves to their destiny.
Homelessness: OFlaherty reading (549 words)
O'Flaherty is an economist so his "way of knowing" is quite different from the others.
We have already accumulated evidence from Rossi, Burt, Honig and Filer, and (maybe) Jencks that housing shortages are one of the causes of the growth in homelessness.
O'Flaherty builds a model that ends up suggesting that several factors could lead to a shortage of housing for the poor.
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