No he wouldn't be. St. Patrick actually wasn't even from Ireland. He is credited with having brought Christianity to Ireland and he came from elsewhere, most likely Britain.
Depends on what country the person declares his allegiance with, it can be either Ireland or Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Ireland and northern Ireland don't compete together but as mentioned earlier its down to the persons preference
A Scotch-Irish are the people living in Ireland or Britain sharing a similar ancestry.
Ireland eats the most cereal coming in at 15 pounds per person per year.
Was George Washington a traitor to Britain in the 1770s? One person's traitor is another person's patriot (freedom-fighter).
Yes, very much. They are actually two different islands with five different nations.Great Britain is home to Scotland, England and Wales.Ireland is home to the Republic of Ireland (AKA Ireland) and Northern Ireland.---- YES!!!!! Irish people hate being mistaken for British (English in particular). Never call an Irish person British!!!!!
An Irish person is someone born in Ireland - or a person born in another country who becomes a naturalized Irish citizen. The same rules apply to people born in Scotland or England (or naturalized). English, Scottish and Irish (Northern Ireland, not the Republic of Ireland which is in the southern part of Ireland) people are British since the three countries (plus Wales) make up the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
A loyalist is a person who stayed loyal to Great Britain during the American Revolution
Great Britain is the islands which incorporate England, Wales and Scotland. The United Kingdom is the UK of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland is no more, and can never be any more a part of Great Britain than Denmark can. It is, however, the UK. plain and simple.
Jamie Quinn
Betsy ross,george washington,and benjiman franklen
You call them British. They might be preferred to be called Scottish if they come from Scotland, English is they are from England, Irish if they are from N. Ireland and Welsh if they are from Wales.