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Cregagh (from Irish an Chreagaigh 'the rocky place') is an area southeast of Belfast in County Down, Northern Ireland. It is the name of a townland and... |
Iris Robinson (section Political career) cousins are Roman Catholics. She attended Cregagh Primary School, Knockbreda Intermediate School and Cregagh Technical College before becoming a secretary... |
Belfast (section Developing port, radical politics) the Holywood Road; and from the Albert Bridge (1890) south east out the Cregagh and Castlereagh roads. The further out, the more substantial, and less... |
List of Ireland-related topics (section Politics) Carrowdore Castlewellan Clandeboye Cloghy Clough Conlig Corbet Crawfordsburn Cregagh Crossgar Cultra Derryneill Dollingstown Donaghcloney Dromara Drumaness... |
"the localities of Gilnahirk, Tullycarnet, Braniel, Castlereagh, Merok, Cregagh, Wynchurch, Glencregagh and Belvoir, Collin Glen, Poleglass, Lagmore, Twinbrook... |
Office The Constitutional Year Book For 1894, Conservative Central Office Politics Resources (Election results from 1922 onwards) Electoral Calculus (Election... |
representing half of Cregagh's residents opposing its move. Following the local enquiries, the Boundary Commission proposed retaining the Cregagh ward in East... |
McWilliam, surrealist sculptor. John Mitchel, Irish nationalist activist and political journalist. Cyril Scott, actor Joseph M. Scriven, writer of the poem which... |
Castlereagh (borough) (category Politics of County Down) the East Belfast constituency (the wards of Ballyhanwood, Carrowreagh, Cregagh, Downshire, Dundonald, Enler, Gilnahirk, Graham's Bridge, Lisnasharragh... |
history of the Londonderrys who played a leading role in British social and political life. The ninety-eight acre garden at Mount Stewart has been proposed... |
Alan Campbell (pastor) (section Political activities) Campbell's views can be seen in a sermon delivered in October 1985 at the Cregagh Pentecostal Fellowship in which he attacked all major tenets of the Catholic... |
Reform of local government in Northern Ireland (category Political history of Northern Ireland) in the Republic of Ireland). Initial reaction from Northern Ireland's political parties, except for Sinn Féin, was hostile, emphasising the reduction... |
realising that she was a Catholic from Armagh, took her to a house on Cregagh Street on the pretense of having a party. When there, Ms Smyth was followed... |
first such development being the pair of point blocks in East Belfast's Cregagh estate. These eleven-story towers were completed in 1961 and were the first... |
Open Brethren (section Political influence) Brethren movement. Some of the more conservative assemblies discourage political involvement, sometimes to the extent of judging anyone in fellowship who... |
Newry (section Politics and diplomacy) (PNI vol. I). Turner, B, ed. (2006). The Statesman's Yearbook 2006: The Politics, Cultures and Economies of the World. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.... |
wider implication for geopolitics in the British Isles and indeed European politics, in the context of the Hundred Years' War; one faction made alliances with... |
turned it all around". Belfast Telegraph. 21 November 2014. "Howe hopes political ambitions take wing". The Times. 1 May 2005. Retrieved 21 June 2021. "David... |
employed a large workforce. The end of the 18th century was a time of great political and social turmoil in Ireland. The United Irishmen, inspired by the American... |
story of their discovery is thought to have been crafted by de Courcy for political reasons. In the Anglo-Norman and later medieval era the town's name in... |