@wylfcen It has survived in irish. We still use 'tuath'. It is also the basis for the scots/English 'teuchter' .. a derogatory term for the gaelic (middle irish) speaking Scots (the original Scots came from Ireland.
Within Irish brehon law a tuath had a legal terratorial basis.
@Pretty_Boy666 You mean they changed the legislation which kept Irish land from Irish ownership. Look up the penal laws. Native Irish banned from voting, owning property, speaking their language and much more.
Theres a reason why we took up arms against 🇬🇧
@Sarahjdublin The brits taught you agriculture, built your railways and stopped you shagging your sisters. The only constant whinning is from the victim obsessed Irish whose whole identity is being humanised by the Brits.
@Molycuddle It's coz rats weren't indigenous to Ireland ... they came on ships from the continent. Probably during Norman invasions .. Norman's spoke French (francach/frankish) so the irish called these rats 'Luch Francach' .. frankish mice.
@GaulishThe35998 I dont think you can be so narrow with your definition. The characteristics of pagan Eire would've vaired massively over time and region. Like any religion it would have wasted and waned through periods of conservatism and change
@OliverBrogan3@nonregemesse 2400 participants. 1200 in each jurisdiction.
The caveat ypur looking for:
The “majority for unity” result depends heavily on the condition “as part of the EU”
@nicsadventure@nonregemesse Based on the Good Friday Agreement signed by 🇬🇧.. (troubles peace treaty) the UK secretary of state to NI can call a referendum .. but I agree .. no way the Uk will install a secretary who would allow a referendum