28 examples of hibernia in sentences

In his London, a poem, are the following nervous lines: 'For who would leave, unbrib'd, Hibernia's land?

The truth is, like the ancient Greeks and Romans, he allowed himself to look upon all nations but his own as barbarians: not only Hibernia, and Scotland, but Spain, Italy, and France, are attacked in the same poem.

On, was the battle cry, Conquer this day or die, Sons of Hibernia, fight for Liberty!

Igbernia, Ibernia, Hibernia, or Ireland, which we call Scotland, is surrounded on every side by the ocean; and because it is nearer the setting sun, the weather is milder than it is in Britain.

Natus in Hibernia, Forniae Longfordiensis, In loco cui nomen Pallas.

Hibernia Dominicana, 691. Carte, ii. 118, 120, 123.]

Hibernia Dominicana, 706.]

Of the many priests who still remained in the country, several were discovered, and forfeited their lives on the gallows; those who escaped detection concealed themselves in the caverns of the mountains, or in lonely hovels raised in the midst of the morasses, whence they issued during the night to carry the consolations [Footnote 1: Hibernia Dominicana, 707.

[b]For who would leave, unbrib'd, Hibernia's land, Or change the rocks of Scotland for the Strand?

Elfiniae, in Hibernia, natus MDCCXXIX.

In 1173 occurred the conquest of Ireland, anciently called Hibernia.

For who would leave, unbribed, Hibernia's land, Or change the rocks of Scotland for the Strand?

(For the Mirror.) Hibernia.

I went up the St. John's River, and took board at a plantation called Hibernia, one of numerous similar establishments on the river, hotels proper not existing there.

Hibernia, Fla. Hoar, Judge E.R., joins the Adirondack Club; Grant's attorney-general.

(From the "Pacata Hibernia.")] From the twelfth century onwards, the Desmond Geraldines had been lords, as has been seen, of a vast tract of Ireland, covering the greater part of Munster.

(From the "Pacata Hibernia," of Sir G. Carew.)]

(From the "Pacata Hibernia," of Sir G. Carew.) 1.

" Carew, "Pacata Hibernia.

The King likewise, as a mark of his favour, was pleased to give him a commission of Colonel Agregate (that was the term) to one of the Irish regiments, called Hibernia, and commanded by the marquis de Castelar.

HIBERNIA SHOAL, seen by Mr. Samuel Ashmore, Commander of the ship Hibernia, consists of two small sandbanks in the centre of a shoal, four miles in extent, lying in an east and west direction.

HIBERNIA SHOAL, seen by Mr. Samuel Ashmore, Commander of the ship Hibernia, consists of two small sandbanks in the centre of a shoal, four miles in extent, lying in an east and west direction.

Captain Boyle, in the privateer Comet of Baltimore, fought the Hibernia, of 18 guns, and later in the Chasseur, known as the phantom ship, so fast she sailed, took eighty prizes on the high seas.

303 sq. P.W. Joyce, A Social History of Ancient Ireland (London, 1903), i. 290 sq., referring to Kuno Meyer, Hibernia Minora, p. 49 and Glossary, 23.

HIBERNIA, the classical name for Ireland, which to the ancient world was in the main a terra incognita.

28 examples of  hibernia  in sentences