Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Thomas Addis Emmet (24 April 1764 – 14 November 1827) was an Irish and American lawyer and politician. In Ireland, in the 1790s, he was a senior member of the Society of United Irishmen as it planned for an insurrection against the British Crown and Protestant Ascendancy.

  2. 20 de abr. de 2024 · Ogden. Thomas Addis Emmet (born April 24, 1764, Cork, County Cork, Ire.—died Nov. 14, 1827, New York City) was a lawyer in Ireland and, later, in the United States, a leader of the nationalist Society of United Irishmen, and elder brother of the Irish revolutionary Robert Emmet.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Emmet, Thomas Addis (1764–1827), United Irishman and lawyer, was born 24 April 1764 in Cork, second son among three surviving sons and one daughter of Robert Emmet (qv), state physician of Ireland, and Elizabeth Emmet (née Mason; d. 1803). He entered TCD 7 July 1778, won a scholarship (1781) and graduated BA (1783).

  4. Emmet, Thomas Addis, M.D., Barrister-at-law, a leading United Irishman, son of Dr. Robert Emmet, State Physician, was born in Cork, 24th April 1764. Education. He was educated at the school of Mr. Kerr, and entered Trinity College in 1778. His career there gave ample promise of future eminence.

    • Alfred Webb
  5. 22 de may. de 2013 · The Emmet Collection was assembled over a period of fifty years by Dr. Thomas Addis Emmet, a renowned surgeon and one of the early collectors of American manuscripts of the revolutionary era. His collection of 94 volumes of manuscripts and extra-illustrated books was purchased by John S. Kennedy and presented to The New York Public ...

  6. Thomas Addis Emmet, “Observations on the Causes and Consequences of the Conquest of Ireland by Britain from 1171 to 1789,” in Emmet, Memoir, I:8–9.

  7. 11 de feb. de 2016 · February / March 2016. When the rebellion of 1798 failed, many of The United Irishmen, including Thomas Addis Emmet, came to the United States where their influence was enormous. You may well wonder why a historian of the United States should presume to write about the United Irishmen of 1798.