Examples of using Armagh in English and their translations into Spanish
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Colloquial
who was the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh in the 17 th century.
the Book of Armagh(Dublin, Trinity College,
close to the modern town of Armagh.
The Anglican Archbishop of Armagh is the ecclesiastical head of the Church of Ireland, bearing the title Primate of All Ireland, the metropolitan of the Province of Armagh and the diocesan bishop of the Diocese of Armagh.
Gough Barracks in Armagh, Northern Ireland,
Plans are in hand to establish a Centre of Excellence in the education of children with Autism at Middletown in County Armagh to promote excellence in the education of children
Since 1998, the Ulster Museum, Armagh Museum, Ulster Folk and Transport Museum
The Battle of the Yellow Ford(Irish: Cath Bhéal-an-Átha-Buí) was fought in western County Armagh, Ulster, in Ireland, near the River Blackwater on 14 August 1598,
County Armagh.
the home of Armagh City, while Ferney Park was brought up to Championship standard.
in which St. Patrick is given the primatial rights and prerogatives of Armagh by an angel.
a native of County Armagh, Ireland who later settled in Kingston, Ontario with his family.
In 1597, Lord Deputy Thomas Burgh built a new fort on the river Blackwater five miles northwest of the government's garrisoned town Armagh.
1904 to serve as the Roman Catholic Cathedral of the Archdiocese of Armagh, the original Medieval Cathedral of St. Patrick having been transferred to the Protestant Church of Ireland at the time of the Irish Reformation.
the Archbishop of Armagh Lord Chancellor of Ireland Speaker of the Irish House of Commons Among their duties was to welcome the incoming Lord Lieutenant when he arrived in state in the port of Dublin,
They had dug trenches along and across parts of the road and countryside between Armagh town and the Blackwater fort, and blocked the pathways with felled trees, and set up brushwood breastworks,
who were among five persons reportedly arrested by soldiers of the Special Air Services(SAS) in South Armagh, Northern Ireland on 10 April 1997.
expelled Niall's confessor Éogan Mainistrech from Armagh, installing his own half-brother, Artrí mac Conchobair, who may have been the son of High King Conchobar mac Donnchada, as abbot of Armagh.
where he perhaps acknowledged the ecclesiastical supremacy of Armagh, he was to be disappointed.
where he perhaps acknowledged the ecclesiastical supremacy of Armagh, he was to be disappointed.