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  1. Esmonde, Sir Thomas Henry Grattan (1862–1935), 11th baronet, landowner and politician, was born 21 September 1862 at Pau, France, the eldest of seven children of Sir John Esmonde (d. 1876), a liberal MP and tenth holder of a baronetcy created in 1628, and Louisa Esmonde (d. 1880), daughter of Henry Grattan Jr (qv), MP.

  2. Hace 5 días · Statesman. Henry Grattan, statesman and defender of the rights of Ireland, was buried next to Charles James Fox in the north transept of Westminster Abbey. The Abbey funeral fee book records "died Sunday June 4 1820 at his late English place of residence no 68 Baker Street, Portman Square aged 74 years, to be buried from Richmond House privy ...

  3. GRATTAN, Henry (1746-1820), Irish statesman and orator, was born 3d July 1746. His father, a Protestant, was for many years recorder of the city of Dublin, and from 1761 to 1766 its representative in the Irish parliament ; and his mother was a daughter of Thomas Marlay, chief justice of Ireland.

  4. Henry Grattan 200 years on—a misunderstood legacy? Born in Dublin’s Fishamble Street in 1746, but resident for most of his life in Tinnehinch, near Enniskerry, Co. Wicklow, Henry Grattan was the most noted, and certainly the most eloquent, of the eighteenth-century opposition ‘patriots’ in the Irish Parliament.

  5. Henry Grattan (3 juillet 1746 – 6 juin 1820) est un membre de la chambre des communes irlandaise. Il est le chef du mouvement qui force la Grande-Bretagne à accorder l'indépendance législative à l'Irlande en 1782.

  6. 29 de jun. de 2022 · Grattan was said to have done well in speaking against the address, 21 Nov. 1826, when he was a minority teller for his own amendment for including mention of Irish grievances and promising their redress, which was defeated by 135-58.18 Thereafter, like his brother (from whom he was distinguished as ‘Henry Grattan’ rather than ‘Mr. Grattan’), he was very active in promoting Catholic ...

  7. Henry Grattan's Parliament. For most of the eighteenth century, the Irish parliament in Dublin was prepared to accept a subordinate role. In return, England would always defend Protestant interests in Ireland. Under Porings' Law, passed in the fifteenth century, no Irish act could pass without the approval of the king and his advisers in England.