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Chevalier O'Gorman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tomás, Chevalier O'Gorman or Tomás Ó Gormáin (or Mac Gormáin)[1] (1732–1809) was an Irish soldier and genealogist.

Born in Castletown, County Clare, the son of Patrick O'Gorman. His first language was Irish. Thomas O'Gorman is from the MacGorman clan. He was educated as a medical doctor at the Irish College, Paris. He served with the Irish Brigade in the French army, and was created Chevalier by Louis XV.

O'Gorman married a daughter of Count d'Éon, and from him inherited vast vineyards, lost in the French Revolution. After this, he retired to Ireland, where he pursued his antiquarian studies; from about 1764 he corresponded with Charles O'Conor, and had made an impressive collection of Irish manuscripts. He also compiled pedigrees of Irish expatriates, and personally arranged for the Book of Ballymote to be given by the Irish College to the Royal Irish Academy in Dublin.

According to a somewhat dubious legend, O'Gorman received the Brian Boru Harp and gave it to Colonel Burton Conyngham, who transferred it in Trinity College Dublin, where it remains.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Mac Gormáin is the correct version: see Mac Lysaght, Edward, The Surnames of Ireland, Irish Academic Press, 1980 (5th edition), p. 132. ISBN 0-7165-2300-0
  2. ^ The Brian Boru Harp, article in History Ireland magazine, Volume 22, Issue 2, March April 2014.[1]
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