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Maria O'Neill

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maria O'Neill, 1912

Maria da Conceição Infante de Lacerda Pereira de Eça Custance O'Neill (Lisbon, 19 November 1873 – 23 March 1932) was a Portuguese writer, poet, journalist, and spiritualist of Irish descent.

Family

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Maria O'Neill was the daughter of Carlos Tomás O'Neill (Lisbon, Encarnação, 6 December 1846 – ?) and wife (m. 1873) Maria Carlota Pereira de Eça Infante de Lacerda (Lisbon, 15 July 1852 – Lisbon, 1921), daughter of José António Pereira de Eça[1] and wife Maria da Conceição Infante de Lacerda,[2] and paternal granddaughter of Carlos Torlades O'Neill (30 April 1820 (Baptized Lisbon, São Paulo, 13 May 1822) – ?) and wife (m. Lisbon, Encarnação, 4 November 1845) Adelaide Carolina Custance (Lisbon, Santiago, 15 September 1821 – ?), daughter of Thomas Parsons Custance, an English subject (married secondly to his aunt Ludovina Cecília O'Neill), and first wife Antónia Eugénia Barbosa de Brito.

She had a younger brother Carlos Torlades O'Neill (Lisbon, 13 December 1874 – ?), Merchant in Lisbon, where he lived single, Company Administrator, Member of the Administration Council of the Companhia de Seguros Previdente, married to Laura Moreira, without issue, and two aunts, Adelaide O'Neill (? – termo of Setúbal, her Quinta dos Bonecos, 14 November 1865), unmarried and without issue, and Ethelinda O'Neill, unmarried and without issue.

She was a great-granddaughter of José Maria O'Neill, the titular head of the Clanaboy O'Neill dynasty, whose family has been in Portugal since the 18th century, and wife Ludovina de Jesus Alves Solano.

Career

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O'Neill was a writer, poet and journalist.[3] She was also a spiritualist, member of the Superior Deliberative Council of the Federação Espírita Portuguesa and member of the Editorial Office of the magazine Espiritismo. She died on the high seas, on the Atlantic Ocean, on board of the General Osório, travelling from Brazil back to Portugal after giving one of her Spiritualist Conferences.

She became a member of the Lisbon Academy of Sciences, was a vegetarian, and was initiated into Theosophy, a mystical school or initiatory movement that proposed that all religions arose from common stem teachings while seeking knowledge about the mysteries of human existence, the beginning of life and nature, and later became interested in spiritism, to which she devoted a large part of her existence until the end of her days. She was also a vegetarian, and a member of the Lisbon Academy of Sciences.[4]

Marriage and issue

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She married in Lisbon in 1890 António de Bulhões (c. 1870 – ?), a civil servant, and had four children:[5]

  • Maria Antónia Pereira de Eça O'Neill de Bulhões, married firstly to an English subject, divorced, without issue, and married secondly to Francisco de Sousa, without issue
  • Luís Pereira de Eça O'Neill de Bulhões, married to French Madeleine Chayac, without issue
  • José António Pereira de Eça O'Neill de Bulhões (Lisbon, c. 1890 – Lisbon), a bank worker, and wife Maria da Glória Vahia de Barros de Castro (17 March 1905 – aft. October 1989), daughter of Dr. Alberto de Barros e Castro, Medical Doctor (whose father declined the title of Viscount of Soares de Castro), and wife (m. 1904) Maria da Graça de Sousa Vahia (9 December 1882 – ?), and had two children:
  • Maria Francisca Pereira de Eça O'Neill de Bulhões, unmarried and without issue

See also

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References and notes

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  1. ^ General, Governor-General of India, Commander of the Royal Asylum of Runa, Commander of the Order of Christ, Commander of the Order of Aviz, Medal of Pedro IV of Portugal and Maria II of Portugal, who nominately fulfilled the functions of Helper of Orders of his brother in law the 2nd Baron of Sabroso, who was the 85th Governor of India, etc.
  2. ^ Of the Barons of Sabroso.
  3. ^ Anuário da Nobreza de Portugal, III, 2006, Tomo III, pg. 1.398
  4. ^ "Biografia de Maria O�Neill". biografias.netsaber.com.br. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  5. ^ Raízes e Memórias, Associação Portuguesa de Genealogia, Lisboa, N.º 5, pg. 97
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