Sinéad de Valera
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sinéad de Valera, also known as Sinéad Ní Fhlannagáin and Sinéad Bean de Valera[1] (pronounced: shin-aid ban deh-vuh-lair-ruh), (3 June 1878 - 7 January 1975), was the wife of the Irish republican leader and third President of Ireland, Éamon de Valera.
Born either Jane or Janice Flanagan in Balbriggan, County Dublin (she altered the spelling of her name to the Irish equivalent—Sinéad—later in life), she trained as a teacher and took up her first post in a national school in Dorset Street, Dublin. In her spare time she taught Irish with the Gaelic League in Parnell Square. One of her Irish students was Eamon de Valera, then a teacher of mathematics.
On 8 January 1910, they were married, although she was 4 years older than her husband. Together they had five sons and two daughters. During her husband's 50 years in public life she played little or no public rôle. Following the Easter Rising in 1916 she saw little of her husband. In 1932 de Valera became head of the government, and Sinéad de Valera started writing stories for children in both English and Irish. Though she kept to the background as far as public matters were concerned, Sinéad was a highly political person. Rumours differ, however, as to whether she was in fact more moderate or more radical than her husband. During her husband's fourteen years as President of Ireland she appeared in public on only very rare occasions.
She wrote a book 'Irish Fairy Tales' which retold in her own words twelve traditional Irish stories.
Sinéad de Valera died on 7 January 1975, at the age of 96, the day before what would have been the de Valeras' sixty-fifth wedding anniversary. Her husband Éamon died nearly eight months later, on 29 August 1975.
She is buried with him in Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin.
[edit] References
- ^ "Sinéad wife of de Valera". This old form of address for married women has now largely, though not entirely, fallen from use.