hibernia
Hibernia was the Roman name for Ireland.
The old Roman name for Germany was "Germania."
Hibernia was the Roman name for Ireland.
He was 16 years old when captured by pirates from Roman Britain and taken to Ireland.
No, it was not. It's a Greek name and the country is with the Roman Empire, Ireland and Greece. Now, Celtica is France.
That was Ireland. Scotland was Caledonia
Ireland was called Hibernia by the ancient Romans. The name derives from the Latin word Hibernus, meaning "wintry" or "cold," likely referencing the island's northern location and cooler climate compared to the Mediterranean region. Although the Romans never conquered Ireland, they were aware of its existence through exploration and trade. Hibernia remained the Roman name for Ireland in classical literature and maps, even though the island itself remained outside the Roman Empire's control.
Scotia is the old name for Ireland.
Roman Catholic is Ireland's most common religion. After that it is the Church of Ireland.
No. The Roman Empire got as far as Britain, Ireland's neighbouring island, but never reached Ireland. In any case, Northern Ireland only came into existence in 1922, long after the Roman Empire ended. It also ended long before Britain had any role in Ireland. So Northern Ireland was never part of the Roman empire.
A hamlet is an old name for a small village. It is also the name of a cigar and a play.
it means ugly and smelly and hideous .. it comes from the roman gypsies who never settled in ireland