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・ O'Shaughnessy Dam (Ohio)
・ O'Shaughnessy's Boy
・ O'Shaughnessy's chameleon
・ O'Shea
・ O'Shea (band)
・ O'Shea and Bennett's Siding
・ O'Shea and Whelan
・ O'Shea Building
・ O'Shea Jackson, Jr.
・ O'Shea Peak
・ O'Shea's Drayton Cottage
・ O'Sheas Casino
・ O'Sheehan
・ O'Shúilleabháin clan
・ O'Stravaganza – Vivaldi in Ireland
O'Sullivan
・ O'Sullivan Army Heliport
・ O'Sullivan Beach Football Club
・ O'Sullivan Beach, South Australia
・ O'Sullivan Beach-Lonsdale Football Club
・ O'Sullivan College
・ O'Sullivan Dam
・ O'Sullivan Ladies Open
・ O'Sullivan Peak
・ O'Sullivan v Noarlunga Meat Ltd
・ O'Sullivan v Noarlunga Meat Ltd (No 2)
・ O'Toole
・ O'Toole (surname)
・ O'Toole family
・ O'Toole Park


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O'Sullivan : ウィキペディア英語版
O'Sullivan

O'Sullivan ((アイルランド語:Ó Súilleabháin)), also known as simply Sullivan, is an Irish Gaelic clan based most prominently in what is today County Cork and County Kerry. The surname is associated with the southwestern part of Ireland and was originally found in County Tipperary before the Anglo-Norman invasion. It is the third most numerous surname in Ireland. Due to emigration is also common in Australia, North America, Britain and the rest of the world.
The O'Sullivans are the medieval and modern continuation of the ancient Eóganacht Chaisil sept of Cenél Fíngin, being descendants of Fíngen mac Áedo Duib, king of Cashel or Munster from 601 to 618. They are thus understood to be of royal extraction. Fedelmid mac Crimthainn (died 847), the celebrated King of Munster and nearly High King of Ireland, was the last king of the Cenél Fíngin/O'Sullivan line. Later they became the chief princes underneath their close kinsmen the MacCarthy dynasty in the small but powerful Kingdom of Desmond, successor of Cashel/Munster.
The motto for the O'Sullivans is ''"An Lámh Fhoisteanach Abú"'' which translates as "The Steady Hand to Victory".
==Etymology and Orthography==

In the Irish language the word ''Ó'' means 'grandson' and can be found in many Irish surnames. It has been anglicised as O'. When placed before the genitive form of ''Súileabhán'', which is ''Súileabháin'', it can be translated as ''grandson of''. While the use of an apostrophe is a common convention in English, the apostrophe is never used in the original Irish language version of the name.
In the last 200 or 300 years those families connected to the name have dispersed widely throughout the English-speaking world and to other areas. Emigrants often suppressed the prefix "O".
According to Woulfe in ''Sloinnte Gaedheal is Gall'' ''Ó Súileabháin'' (the genitive form of ''súileabhán'' being ''súileabháin'') derives from the Irish ''Ó'' which comes from ''Ua'' meaning ''grandson'' and ''súildubhán'' meaning ''little dark-eyed one'', from the Irish ''súil'' meaning ''eye'' followed by ''dubh'' meaning ''black'' and the diminutive suffix ''-án''.
Edward MacLysaght states in ''The Surnames of Ireland'' that ''while there is no doubt that the basic word is súil (eye) there is a disagreement as to the meaning of the last part of the name.'' Other meanings commonly reported are ''one-eyed'' or ''hawk-eyed''.
MacLysaght also tells us that Mac Criomhthain (MacCrohan) and Mac Giolla Chuda (MacGillycuddy) are important branches of the Súileabhánaigh in Co Kerry.
Spelling variants on the name include: Sullavan, Sullivant, Sillivant, Silliphant, and Sillifant.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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