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  1. Piaras Feiritéar (Irish pronunciation: [ˈpʲiəɾˠəsˠ fʲɛɾʲəˈtʲeːɾˠ]; 1600? – 1653), or Pierce Ferriter, was an Irish clan Chief, and poet.

  2. Feiritéar, Piaras (Ferriter, Pierce) (c.1600–c.1653), Gaelic poet, royalist and folk hero, was the son of Edmund Ferriter (c.1568–1628) of Ballysyble and Ballyferriter, west Co. Kerry; nothing is known of his mother.

  3. Ghlac Feiritéaraigh páirt in éirithe amach na nGearaltach in 1574 agus in 1583. Tá tagairt in Inquisitio sa bhliain 1633 d’Éamonn agus Piaras Feiritéar a bheith i mBaile Sibéal. Éamonn a bhí ar athair Phiarais. Ní foláir nó d’fhreastail Piaras ar scoil filíochta.

  4. Piaras Feiritéar, or Pierce Ferriter, was an Irish clan Chief, and poet. Although best known for his many works of Bardic poetry in the Irish language, Feiritéar is also a widely revered folk hero in the Dingle Peninsula for his role as a leader of the nascent Irish Confederacy, which led to his 1653 summary execution at Killarney for ...

  5. In Praise of Two Margarets: Two Laudatory Poems by Piaras Feiritéar. Deirdre Nie Mhathúna. This paper examines two panegyric poems by Piaras Feiritéar. (anglicised: Pierce Ferriter), poet and military leader from the Dingle. Peninsula, Co. Kerry.

  6. A POEM BY PIARAS FEIRIT~EAR THE following poem, hitherto unpublished, is taken from the R. I. A. MS. 23 C 21, p. 133. A colophon to the poem gives the scribe's name and date as follows: Crioch ar an muid sin le hEoghan Caom[h]dnac[h] an 30. la do m[h]iosa Decemb' 1816. The text, unfortunately, is deplorably corrupt, but I have failed to discover

  7. of Piaras Feiritear. DEIRDRJE NIC MHATHUNA. (St Patrick's College, Drumcondra) This article will investigate the interplay between elements of convention and innovation in the corpus of poems ascribed to the. seventeenth-century poet Piaras Feiritear.