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Well You Will Have to Burn Me in It Boys the Remarkable Tale of Glin Castle and Its Unlikel Survival Through Two Centuries of Turmoil in Ireland

ScholarFrenchWorldlanguages FrenchManmade Disaster Implied

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AI insight

AI-generated

This article is a historical narrative about Glin Castle and the FitzGerald family. No commercial mechanism, price impact, supply chain, or company margin effect is present. The content is purely historical and biographical, with no relevance to current markets or sectors.

Signals our AI researcher identified

Extracted by our AI model from this article and related public sources — not direct quotes from the publisher.

  • John FitzGerald inherited an estate with income of about £4,000 a year but faced overwhelming debts.
  • A private act of Parliament was passed on June 20, 1801 to settle his financial troubles.
  • FitzGerald invested over £6,000 in building Glin Castle.
  • The FitzGerald family has been associated with Glin Castle since 1169.
  • The last titleholder passed away in 2011.

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Well You Will Have to Burn Me in It Boys the Remarkable Tale of Glin Castle and Its Unlikel Survival Through Two Centuries of Turmoil in Ireland — News Analysis