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  1. Daniel (I) O’Connell ( Irish: Dónall Ó Conaill; 6 August 1775 – 15 May 1847), hailed in his time as The Liberator, [1] was the acknowledged political leader of Ireland's Roman Catholic majority in the first half of the 19th century.

  2. 14 de jul. de 2011 · What brought Frederick Douglass, a fugitive American slave, to Ireland? And why was Daniel OConnell revered in the United States as a champion of anti-slavery?

  3. 11 de may. de 2024 · Daniel O’Connell (born Aug. 6, 1775, near Cahirciveen, County Kerry, Ire.—died May 15, 1847, Genoa, Kingdom of Sardinia [Italy]) was a lawyer who became the first great 19th-century Irish nationalist leader. Compelled to leave the Roman Catholic college at Douai, France, when the French Revolution broke out, O’Connell went to London to ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 25 de oct. de 2021 · Barry Roche Southern Correspondent. Mon Oct 25 2021 - 11:35. Daniel O’Connell used competing and contradictory aspects of his life to bring differing groups of people with him to achieve...

  5. 9 de may. de 2018 · The Irish statesman Daniel O'Connell (1775-1847) created modern Irish nationalism and served as the most successful champion of democracy in the Europe of his day. Daniel O'Connell was born on Aug. 6, 1775, at Cahirciveen, County Kerry, a member of the Munster Catholic aristocracy. Following the Celtic traditions of their class, his parents had ...

  6. The main source of the criticism of the political leadership of Daniel O'Connell during the last three years of his life emanated from inside his own Irish Repeal Party. These attacks crystallized around the conflict that arose between the moral force tactics of O'Connell and the more militant and republican and separatist critics of these ...

  7. Although they had no intention of using or recommending the use of force in the prevailing circumstances, a number of O'Connell's young critics, led by Thomas Francis Meagher (qv), would not accept that force was never justified, and, at a meeting to debate the matter in July 1846, refused to yield to O'Connell, or to his son and political heir ...