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  1. askaboutireland.ie › famous-people › charles-stewart-parnellCharles Stewart Parnell

    Avondale House, Co. Wicklow. Charles Stewart Parnell was born into a 'Big House' in Avondale, Co. Wicklow. The son of a landlord, and a landlord himself, Parnell was nevertheless an advanced nationalist and at the forefront of the campaign for home rule for Ireland. Parnell became a Member of Parliament, representing Meath, in 1875.

  2. 29 de mar. de 2022 · On Monday, February 2, 1880, Charles Stewart Parnell addressed the American Congress. He was only the fourth international politician to be accorded this honor and the first Irish man. During his 32-minute-long speech, he laid out a blue-print for the end of the much-hated landlord system in Ireland. He also linked it to recurring famines

  3. 查尔斯·斯图尔特·巴涅尔Charles Stewart Parnell,(1846~1891),也有翻译为查尔斯·斯图尔特·帕内尔,19世纪后期爱尔兰民族主义领袖, 自治运动领导人,英国国会议员(1875-1891)。

  4. Charles Stewart Parnell (Avondale, 27 de junho de 1846 — Brighton, 6 de outubro de 1891) foi um político e nacionalista irlandês, membro do Partido Parlamentar Irlandês, foi representante de seu país no Parlamento em Londres. Suas posições causavam polêmica entre os irlandeses [1].

  5. Charles Stewart Parnell Político irlandés Nació el 27 de junio de 1846 en Avondale, condado de Wicklow. Cursó estudios en la Universidad de Cambridge.En sus comienzos en política apoyó al partido autonomista de Isaac Butt. Fue elegido diputado de la Cámara de los Comunes británica en 1875. Se opuso a las leyes sobre la propiedad inmobiliaria irlandesa en 1878 y fue presidente de la ...

  6. Charles Stewart Parnell. (1846–91). A Protestant who had little in common with his Irish Catholic fellow countrymen, Charles Stewart Parnell led the Irish members of the British House of Commons in the fight for Irish self-government. Parnell failed to win home rule for Ireland, but his work helped lay the foundation for the Republic of ...

  7. Charles Stewart Parnell. The Great Famine of 1845 to 1849 left over 1 million dead with a further 1 million emigrating over the following 10 years. One of the effects of the disaster was to demonstrate to ordinary Irish people that the English Government had failed them in their time of need and that they must seize control of their own destiny.