Hugo José Jorge O'Neill

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Hugo José Jorge O'Neill (7 June 1874 in

Ó Néill Clann Aodha Buidhe) dynasty, which ruled a kingdom in Gaelic Ireland until the early 17th century, and has been in Portugal
since the 18th century.

Recognition

He was the first son of the previous head of the family of Jorge Torlades O'Neill II and wife Maria Isabel Mazziotti da Costa Cordeiro Fernandes. He was also the Representative of the title of Viscount of Santa Mónica, in Portugal.

Life

Hugo José Jorge O'Neill was an

Officer of the Portuguese Navy and an Officer at the Orders of Kings Carlos I of Portugal and Manuel II of Portugal.[1] He met and corresponded with Roger Casement in 1904 (when Casement was briefly consul general in Lisbon) and the also met with the Belfast antiquarian solicitor Francis Joseph Bigger.[citation needed] O'Neill also employed an Irish governess for his children.[2]

Marriage and issue

He married in Lisbon, Santos-o-Velho, on 14 February 1906

Dona Júlia Margarida Catarina de Serpa Pimentel de Sousa Coutinho (Lisbon, Lapa, 27 September 1881 – Lisbon, Pena, 28 February 1934), daughter of Dom Fernando de Serpa Leitão de Mansilha Pimentel[a] and wife Dona Maria Ana Vitória de Sousa Coutinho,[b]
and had four children:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Decorated Officer, of the Marquesses (formerly Counts and Viscounts) of Gouveia and Barons of São João de Areias.
  2. Infanta Ana de Jesus Maria of Portugal
    .
  3. ^ Of Scottish descent on her mother's side.
  4. ^ Of Scottish descent on her mother's side.
  5. ^ Son of João Franco Ferreira Pinto Castelo-Branco and of German Swiss and Swiss Italian descent on his mother's side.
  6. Anadia and 13th Lord of the Manor of Mangualde, of the Viscounts of Alverca and Counts (formerly Viscounts) of Alferrarede
    .
  7. Calheta
    .
  8. ^ Daughter of the 3rd Count (formerly Viscounts and Lords of the Majorat) of a Aurora.
  9. ^ Born to a German father.
  10. Castelo-Branco, and of the Counts of a Figueira
    , and also of the Marquesses (formerly Counts) of Castelo Melhor and Counts of a Calheta.
  11. ^ Of the Counts (formerly Viscounts) of Paço de Arcos, of remote English ancestry.
  12. ^ Of the Viscounts of Atouguia.
  13. Ribeira Brava
    .
  14. Cantanhede, and of the Marquesses of Valença, Marquesses (formerly Counts of Aguiar and Counts of Vimioso, great-great-granddaughter of Dom José Bernardino de Portugal e Castro, 5th Marquess of Valença, 12th Count of Vimioso, 27th Prime Minister of Portugal

References

  1. ^ Anuário da Nobreza de Portugal, III, 2006, Tomo III, pg. 1.395
  2. .