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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_DillonJohn Dillon - Wikipedia

    John Dillon (4 September 1851 – 4 August 1927) was an Irish politician from Dublin, who served as a Member of Parliament (MP) for over 35 years and was the last leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party.

    • Constituency established
    • 4 August 1927 (aged 75), London, England
  2. John Dillon (born Sept. 8, 1851, Blackrock, County Dublin, Ire.—died Aug. 4, 1927, London, Eng.) was a leader of the Irish Parliamentary Party (Irish Nationalist Party) in the struggle to secure Home Rule by parliamentary means. Through the 1880s he was perhaps the most important ally of the greatest 19th-century Irish nationalist, Charles ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. John Dillon (1851–1927) was a nationalist parliamentarian and a leader of the Irish party. He was involved in the land agitation, the Home Rule movement, and the Parnell split.

  4. John Myles Dillon (/ ˈ d ɪ l ən /; born 15 September 1939) is an Irish classicist and philosopher who was Regius Professor of Greek in Trinity College, Dublin between 1980 and 2006. Prior to that he taught at the University of California, Berkeley. He was elected a corresponding member of the Academy of Athens on 15 June 2010.

  5. Professor John Dillon. Emeritus Fellow. I studied Classics at Oxford, and subsequently completed a Ph. D., at the University of California, Berkeley, joining the faculty there in 1969. In 1980, I took up the Regius Chair of Greek at Trinity College, and remained in that post until my retirement in 2006.

  6. JOHN DILLON AND. THE HOME RULE MOVEMENT. MICHAEL TIERNEY. IN selecting Professor F. S. L. Lyons to write their father's life, the Dillon family ten years ago made a wise and momentous choice. Long a professor in Trinity College, Dublin, and now at the University of Kent, Dr Lyons had already established himself as the historian of the Irish ...

  7. Dillon, J. (2017) ‘Embracing the Academic Tradition: Some Reflections on the Aporetic Elements in Plutarch’s Philosophy’, in Y.Z. Liebersohn, I. Ludlam, A. Edelheit (eds.), For a Skeptical Peripatetic: Festschrift in Honour of John Glucker, Sankt Augustin: Academia Verlag, 264-77.