Bibliography

Clercq, Jan de, and Pierre Swiggers, “The Hibernian connection: Irish grammaticography in Louvain”, in: Anders Ahlqvist, Konrad Koerner, R. H. Robins, and Irène Rosier (eds), Diversions of Galway: papers on the history of linguistics from ICHoLS V, Galway, Ireland, 1-6 September 1990, 3.68, Amsterdam: Benjamins, 1992. 85–102.

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Citation details
Article
“The Hibernian connection: Irish grammaticography in Louvain”
Work
Anders Ahlqvist (ed.) • Konrad Koerner (ed.) • R. H. Robins (ed.) • Irène Rosier (ed.), Diversions of Galway: papers on the history of linguistics from ICHoLS V, Galway, Ireland, 1-6 September 1990 (1992)
Pages
85–102
Year
1992
Subjects and topics
Sources
Texts
History, society and culture
Agents
Giolla Brighde Ó hEodhusaÓ hEodhusa (Giolla Brighde)
(c.1570(?)–d. 1614)
O'Hussey (Bonaventura), Bonaventura
Irish scholar and poet, who after being trained in Ireland, pursued his theological studies abroad, first at Douai and later at St Anthony's College, Louvain (est. 1607), where he was accepted as friar and later as lecturer by the religious name of Bonaventura; author of an Irish catechism, An teagasg críosdaidhe (1611/1614), the first Catholic work to be printed in Irish; a treatise on Irish grammar and prosody entitled Rudimenta grammaticae Hibernicae; and a number of vernacular poems.
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Froinsias Ó MaolmhuaidhÓ Maolmhuaidh (Froinsias)
(c.1606–1677?)
O'Molloy (Francis), Molloy (Francis)
Irish theologian; author of Lucerna fidelium/Lochrann na gcreidmheach (1676) and a grammar on the Irish language, Grammatica Latino-Hibernica (1677).
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Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
December 2011, last updated: July 2021