Denis Taaffe

Irish historian
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroIrish historian
PlacesIreland
wasHistorian
Work fieldSocial science
Gender
Male
Birth1 January 1759
Death1 January 1813 (aged 54 years)
The details

Biography

Denis Taaffe or Dennis Taafe (bapt. 1759, Clogher, County Louth; d. 1813, Dublin) was an Irish political writer, also known under the pseudonym Julius Vindex.

Educated in Franciscan colleges, Taaffe was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in 1782. He converted to the Church of Ireland by 1788, but returned to Catholicism shortly after. He was soon trying to scrape a living as a tutor and pamphleteer. A supporter of the French Revolution and the United Irishmen, Taaffe claimed to have fought in the Irish Rebellion of 1798. He edited a patriotic newspaper, The Shamroc, and his pamphlets against the 1800 Act of Union saw him arrested for seditious libel in 1799. He was a founder member and first secretary of the Gaelic Society of Dublin in 1806, established to research and revive traditions of Irish literature.

Works

  • The probability, causes, and consequences of a union between Great Britain and Ireland, 1798
  • Vindication of the Irish nation, 1802
  • An impartial history of Ireland from the period of the English invasion to the present time, 4 vols., 1809–11. Available at Internet Archive
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.