Lived at No 59 Ard Ros .Love Crossmaglen .Saw them win All Ireland titles .Great Club, Great Proud people ,My Gran , Aunt and Uncle lived in Cross .RIP 🙏🇮🇪 .Great town ,Great Club .🇮🇪 .
Is it any wonder Oisín McOnville turned out to be the man he is with a mother like that. What a beautiful human being. She's like me own mother but on steroids. What a lady.
@@johanakermyr1437 actually its Northern Ireland and its part of the UK based on the wishes of the majority of its people try to get your facts right before opening ur gob
I want to go to Armagh. To find out where my great grandmother lived. She was a Rooney. I've got a Geordie accent will it be safe for me to go there. A foreigner asking questions might look a bit dodgy.
No problems I'd well imagine you'd be made feel very welcome. They've no problem with the English, it's your Government and the crown that's the problem.
Evo Sagan Crossmaglen is about 30km from the coast you bellend. Ireland is a rocky barren west coast, where Travellers originate from, and a fertile land rich east coast, where the two biggest cities are found. South Armagh is half way between those two big east coast cities
Andrew Murphy Travellers come from the famine, not before it, they speak English for fuck sake. No one bar Brits on the island spoke English in any large numbers before 1829, the year the National school system began. That’s how the language shifted from Irish to English. Travellers hardly fucking turned up for school in 1829, converting their kids to English speakers and then fucked off out of school again until the 1960s when the government in the Republic began forcing them into school
Andrew Murphy Very few, and not in the structure we understand now. Almost all Travellers have a west of Ireland, usually Connacht, surname - anglicized into English as Maughan, McDonagh, Connors, Joyce, Collins, Ward etc Even the English language anglicized surnames show the non Travelling origins of these people. Our surnames were anglicized in the mid 18th century about 3 generations before English became the majority language - who did the Brits do this? By making the transfer of land in the Irish language illegal. Title deeds had to be in English, with the surname anglicized. Unlike many attempts to convert us from Irish users and speakers to English since the 14th century Statutes of Kilkenny, this was a huge success for the British. It eliminated the use of Irish surname form from almost everywhere, bar the most remote regions. If Travellers were a separate people for centuries they’d have avoided the transfer of the language from Irish to English and they’d have retained Irish surnames (the non ownership of land and the rejection of the land owing system is the defining feature of the community historically, so the push to change your name from Irish to English to be capable of inheriting land would haven’t effected them).
Great sport I think they should have a penalty shoot out World Cup of shinty just teams taking penalties Also there should be a shinty World Cup that Scotland could win😎