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  1. Bartholomew Teeling (c. 1774 – 24 September 1798) was an Irish military officer and nationalist who was the leader of the rebel forces during the Irish Rebellion of 1798 and who carried out an act of bravery during the Battle of Collooney.

  2. Teeling, Bartholomew (1774–98), United Irishman and French army officer, was the first of four sons of Luke Teeling (qv), a linen merchant at Lisburn, Co. Antrim, and his wife Mary (née Taaffe).

  3. Teeling, Bartholomew, a leading United Irishman, was born at Lisburn, of an old Catholic family, in 1774. His father, Luke Teeling, suffered imprisonment for many years, as a suspect, through 1798 and the Union, not being liberated until 1802.

  4. Bartholomew Teeling (1774-1798) was an Irish military officer who fought in the Rebellion of 1798. Born to a wealthy Catholic family in Lisburn, County Antrim, Teeling and his younger brother Charles joined the Society of United Irishmen in 1795.

  5. A young Irish aide to General Humbert, Lieutenant Bartholomew Teeling, distinguished himself during the encounter. Teeling cleared the way for the advancing Irish-French army by single-handedly disabling a British gunnery post located high on Union Rock when he broke from the French ranks and galloped towards the gunner's position.

  6. 23 de mar. de 2014 · CAPTAIN BARTHOLOMEW TEELING (1774-1798) Teeling is mostly remembered for being an envoy of the United Irishmen to revolutionary France, later landing with Humbert’s expeditionary force in Mayo and for an amazing act during the battle of Collooney.

  7. TEELING, BARTHOLOMEW (1774–1798), United Irishman, was the eldest son of Luke Teeling and of Mary, daughter of John Taaffe of Smarmore Castle, Louth.