新規更新May 18, 2020 at 11:51PM
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Ziounclesi/Arabin
Ziounclesi: refs
'''Arabin''' is a family name originating in France, as d'Arabin or D'Arabien.
Bartholomew (or Barthélemy) d'Arabin de Barcelle (d. 1713), was the son of an influential merchant from Riez in the present-day Alpes-de-Haute region of Provence, belonging to one of the oldest families in [[Provence]]. He fled to Holland after the [[revocation of the edict of Nantes]] in 1685, and came over to England with King [[William III of England|William III]] in 1688.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>. Bartholomew was closely associated with the Huguenot settlement of 1694 in [[Portarlington, County Laois]].<ref name="bunbury">[https://ift.tt/2LEYou0 FAMILY HISTORY: ARABIN of CORKAGH & MOYGLARE]</ref>
Some of the Irish Arabins moved to Australia in the 19th century, as the county suffered badly during the [[Great Famine (Ireland)|Great Famine]] (1845–47). The county's population dropped from over 153,000 in 1841 to just over 73,000 in 1881, through emigration and starvation.
== Notable members ==
* Colonel John (or Jean) Arabin, (1703-1757), son of Bartholomew, created the [[57th (West Middlesex) Regiment of Foot]] in 1755 for service in the [[Seven Years' War]].<ref name=regiments></ref>
* John-Daniel Arabin (1727-1757)<ref name="bunbury"/>, attend [[Trinity College]] Dublin, after which he followed his father and grandfather into the army, captain in the 14th [[Irish Dragoons]] in 1751.
* General William John Arabin, Captain Arabin's younger brother, father of William St Julien
* Henry Arabin (1751 or 1752-1841), a prominent [[Dublin]] lawyer, landowner and political activist, ran the Corkagh [[gunpowder]] mills in the [[Clondalkin]] district
* [[William St Julien Arabin]] (1773 – 15 December 1841), a British lawyer and judge
* Captain Septimus Arabin (d.1826) enjoyed a distinguished naval career during the [[Napoleonic Wars]] and died in Paris
* Captain Frederick Arabin of the Royal Artillery married a daughter of Bishop Mountain, first Bishop of [[Quebec]]
* John Ladaveze Arabin (1794-1863), the youngest of Henry and Ann Arabin's nine sons, became [[Lord Mayor of Dublin]] in 1845
== References ==
<references/>
Bartholomew (or Barthélemy) d'Arabin de Barcelle (d. 1713), was the son of an influential merchant from Riez in the present-day Alpes-de-Haute region of Provence, belonging to one of the oldest families in [[Provence]]. He fled to Holland after the [[revocation of the edict of Nantes]] in 1685, and came over to England with King [[William III of England|William III]] in 1688.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>. Bartholomew was closely associated with the Huguenot settlement of 1694 in [[Portarlington, County Laois]].<ref name="bunbury">[https://ift.tt/2LEYou0 FAMILY HISTORY: ARABIN of CORKAGH & MOYGLARE]</ref>
Some of the Irish Arabins moved to Australia in the 19th century, as the county suffered badly during the [[Great Famine (Ireland)|Great Famine]] (1845–47). The county's population dropped from over 153,000 in 1841 to just over 73,000 in 1881, through emigration and starvation.
== Notable members ==
* Colonel John (or Jean) Arabin, (1703-1757), son of Bartholomew, created the [[57th (West Middlesex) Regiment of Foot]] in 1755 for service in the [[Seven Years' War]].<ref name=regiments></ref>
* John-Daniel Arabin (1727-1757)<ref name="bunbury"/>, attend [[Trinity College]] Dublin, after which he followed his father and grandfather into the army, captain in the 14th [[Irish Dragoons]] in 1751.
* General William John Arabin, Captain Arabin's younger brother, father of William St Julien
* Henry Arabin (1751 or 1752-1841), a prominent [[Dublin]] lawyer, landowner and political activist, ran the Corkagh [[gunpowder]] mills in the [[Clondalkin]] district
* [[William St Julien Arabin]] (1773 – 15 December 1841), a British lawyer and judge
* Captain Septimus Arabin (d.1826) enjoyed a distinguished naval career during the [[Napoleonic Wars]] and died in Paris
* Captain Frederick Arabin of the Royal Artillery married a daughter of Bishop Mountain, first Bishop of [[Quebec]]
* John Ladaveze Arabin (1794-1863), the youngest of Henry and Ann Arabin's nine sons, became [[Lord Mayor of Dublin]] in 1845
== References ==
<references/>
https://ift.tt/3bFAdWQ