- en.wikipedia.org ShamrockLinnaeus based his information that the Irish ate shamrock on the comments of English Elizabethan authors such as Edmund Spenser who remarked that the...
- medium.com @jenniferhallockderrig/shamrocks-a-…The Meaning of the Irish Shamrock, the symbol of Ireland. The word shamrock comes from the Old Irish “seamróg”, which can be translated as “little clover”.
- pixabay.com images/search/shamrock/Test your luck with our collection of high quality shamrock images and pictures. Ready for commercial use, download for free! ... shamrock irish clover.
- pinterest.com irishculturejoy/irish-shamrock/Nov 28, 2013 - For everything Irish shamrock. See more ideas about shamrock, irish, st patricks day.
- blog.irishcelticjewellery.com shamrock/The shamrock is an Irish symbol with three leaves. Legend has it Saint Patrick used it to teach the Irish about the Holy Trinity.
- fity.club lists/11/irish-shamrock-plant /What is clear is that by the end of the sixteenth century the shamrock had become known to English writers as a plant particularly associated with the Irish, but only...
- irishcentral.com roots/irish-symbols-shamrock-…Derived from the Irish word seamróg, meaning 'little clover,' shamrock refers to young sprigs of clover. It was coined by Edmund Campion, an English scholar in...
- letsgoireland.com shamrock-meaning/The shamrock is derived from the Irish “seamróg” meaning “little clover”. It is a treasured symbol of luck in Irish culture and also represents the Holy Trinity.
- irish-genealogy-toolkit.com shamrock-plant.htmlThere's nothing uniquely Irish about the shamrock plant, so how did it become known the world over as the 'badge' of Ireland?
- claddaghrings.com celtic-ireland-the-story-of-the…Unfortunately, not everyone is familiar with the history of the Irish Shamrock, which is the national flower of the Emerald Isle.