Eoin MacWhite

Eoin MacWhite (1923–1972) was an Irish diplomat, archaeologist, and scholar.

Birth

He was born in Geneva where his father, Michael MacWhite, was serving as a member of the delegation chosen to represent the newly independent Irish Free State. At the time, the Irish were applying to join the League of Nations. Eoin MacWhite was born on the same day that the Irish Free State's application for membership was approved. His birth coincided with a tragic event for the MacWhite family. On the very day he was born, his infant sister died suddenly. Each member of the Irish delegation attended the infant's funeral in Geneva.[1]

Education and career

He attended University College Dublin from 1940, ultimately earning a PhD in Archaeology. His important contributions to archaeology included work on Irish rock art and the Iberian Bronze Age. He joined the Irish diplomatic service and rose to the rank of ambassador, representing his country first at that rank in Australia and subsequently the Netherlands.

Death

He was killed in a car accident in 1972.[2]

gollark: I switched my main base reactor to D-D to get enough power to run this. It's going to be the battery for my coffee machine.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Also of it being impossible to actually service any of the components.
gollark: There is the SLIGHT issue of it being impossible to adjust the wiring, but you know.
gollark: J'ai deux reactores de fusion.

References

  1. Handwritten letter from Eoin MacNeill to Agnes MacNeill, GENEVA, 14 September 1923; No. 120 UCDA LAI/G/217
  2. The Irish Times (1972) MacWhite: A Noted Scholar, Linguist, Distinguished diplomate dies in Car Crash at the Hague. August 1. Page 9
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.