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[Bishop] John OBrien
   
Life
?-1767; Irish Catholic prelate, vicar-gen. of Cork, Cloyne & Ross,
and bishop of Cork & Cloyne on separation, 1747; compiled
Irish-English dictionary (1768); a work on gavelkind and tanistry in Ireland
(1774-75). DNB
Works
John OBrien, bishop of Cloyne, Focalóir Gaoidhilge - Sax-Bhéarla
(Paris 1768). The introduction to OBriens dictionary contains
an attack on the embezzling of Irish tradition by Macpherson. In 1764,
he had published anonymously an essay in Journal des scavans pointing
out Oisins Irish origin. [See Joseph Leerssen, Mere Irish &
Fíor Ghael, 1986.]
Notes
Gerard OBrien, ed., Catholic Ireland in the Eighteenth
Century, collected Essays of Maureen Wall (1989), ... we find
John OBrien, Bishop of Cloyne, appealing to the Pope for a subsidy
for his Focaloir Gaoidhilge-Sax-Bearha or Irish-English Dictionary
(Paris 1768) on the grounds that it is absolutely necessary for the
preservation of the Catholic religion in Ireland that such a dictionary
should be available to young priests beginning their work there.
[5]
Charles
OConor writes in Nov. 1780 of his intention of putting our
disjointed documents as we have left into some good light, the more as
much labour has been taken of late to put them into the worst (See Letters of Charles OConor of Belanagare, ed. Robert E. Ward
and Catherine Ward, 1988, p. 396); NOTE also his comments on Vallanceys Collectanea, in which he finds the hand of the late Dr. OBrien,
who indulged too much to fancy in his researches both philological
and historical (p.402).
See also under Wood-Martin [definition
of keening].
There is no Brian Cleeve & Anne
Brady, A Dictionary of Irish Writers (Dublin: Lilliput 1985)entry.
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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