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  1. Fínghin mac Donncha Mac Carthaig, 1560-1640 (anglicanizado Florence MacCarthy), fue un príncipe irlandés de finales del siglo XVI y el último pretendiente creíble al título de MacCarthaig Mór antes de su supresión por la autoridad inglesa.

  2. Florence MacCarthy (Irish: Fínghin mac Donncha Mac Carthaig) (1560–1640), was an Irish clan chief and member of the Gaelic nobility of Ireland (Irish: flaith) of the late 16th-century and the last credible claimant to the Mac Carthaig Mór title before its suppression by English authority.

  3. 7 de jul. de 2010 · One such lord was Florence MacCarthy – the last credible claimant to the title of MacCarthy Mor – lord over all the McCarthys and their dependents in the south of Ireland. His career took him in and out of rebellion, into the Tower of London as a prisoner, into the Court of Elizabeth I as a guest, into the hills of west Cork with ...

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  4. Florence MacCarthy (irlandesa: Fínghin mac Donncha Mac Carthaig) (1560-1640), fue una jefa de clan irlandesa y miembro de la nobleza gaélica. de Irlanda (irlandesa: flaith) de finales del siglo XVI y el último pretendiente creíble del título de Mac Carthaig Mór antes de su supresión por parte de la autoridad inglesa.

  5. 29 de abr. de 2022 · Florence (Fineen) MacCarthy Reagh, Lord of Carbery in Munster and ally of Queen Elizabeth, drew the Queen’s disfavor by marrying his cousin Lady Ellen, uniting two branches of the Clan MacCarthy and thereby becoming a threat to the Queen’s control of Munster.

  6. 29 de mar. de 2012 · The fortunes of Florence MacCarthy and his sept and clansmen can show how the native elite fared in the first half of the seventeenth century and how they adapted to the new order. While Florence was in exile, his patrimony in Desmond and Carberry was dismembered piecemeal by various indigenous and colonial parties.

  7. 13 de abr. de 2011 · Carew swept through Munster in the summer of 1600, breaking up concentrations of rebel forces, taking castles and spoiling their lands. Florence MacCarthy, who was appealed to by both sides for help, did nothing more than write evasive letters to both the rebels and the Lord President.