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  1. Theobald Wolfe Tone, né le 20 juin 1763 à Dublin et mort le 19 novembre 1798, est un homme politique irlandais. Aux yeux de certains, il est l’initiateur du nationalisme républicain irlandais. Biographie [ modifier | modifier le code ]

  2. Theobald Wolfe Tone, meist nur Wolfe Tone genannt (* 20. Juni 1763 in Dublin ; † 19. November 1798 ebenda), war Anwalt und ein radikaler Anführer der irischen Unabhängigkeitsbewegung sowie deren Rebellion von 1798 . 1791 gründete er die Society of United Irishmen .

  3. Theobald Wolfe Tone (1763 – 1798) was born in Dublin, Ireland. After studying law at Trinity College, Dublin, he became a barrister. In 1791, Tone founded the Society of the United Irishmen with Thomas Russell and Napper Tandy amongst others. The United Irishmen were a revolutionary group of Protestant and Catholic radicals who sought an end ...

  4. Theobald Wolfe Tone, (20 juni 1763 - 19 november 1798) was een Ierse nationalist. Hij was een van de leiders van de Society of United Irishmen . Wolfe Tone wordt beschouwd als de vader van de republikeinse beweging in Ierland .

  5. Tone, William Theobald Wolfe (1791–1828), officer in the French and American armies, was born 29 April 1791 in Dublin, a son of Theobald Wolfe Tone (qv) and his wife Matilda Tone (qv). At the age of four he left Ireland for America with his parents, sister Maria, and younger brother, Frank (June 1795), but just over a year later he returned ...

  6. 1 de oct. de 1997 · The definitive short biography of Theobald Wolfe Tone (1763–98), the founding father of Irish republicanism Originally published in 1981 as part of the groundbreaking Gill's Irish Lives series, Theobald Wolfe Tone (1763–98), A Life remains the most concise, accessible and authoritative introduction to one of Irish history's most seminal figures.

  7. Theobald Wolfe Tone’s father preserved his son’s bloodstained pocketbook (or wallet) as a reminder of Wolfe Tone’s sacrifice for Irish liberty. On November 11, 1798, Wolfe Tone wrote his last words in this pocketbook: a line in Latin from the ancient Roman poet Virgil, which translates to, “Now, for its second master, it has thee.”