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Curran

Curran may refer to:

Curran (material)

Curran is a material based on cellulose nanofibers from sugarbeet, carrots, or other tubers, extracted from food industry waste. Its fibers are twice as strong as carbon fibers and hold promise for a wide range of industrial and technological applications. The material is produced and marketed by the Scottish company Cellucomp. According to the company, curran is gaelic for carrot, another source of the material.

Curran (surname)

Curran is an Irish and also a Scottish surname. The name derives from the 10th century Gaelic name O'Corraidhin, meaning "the male descendant of Corraidhin" a personal name which comes from "corradh", a spear. (Origin Celtic) 1. Hero, Champion, Knight [Irish Curadhan - curadh (dh mute), hero, + the diminutive suffix an]. 2. Of or for Corran.

While the Curran name is said to have originated with the Ui Charrain, of the Uí Meic Caille sept of the Uí Liatháin kings of Munster the fact is that the High King of Ireland at the turn of the Christian era was a Curran which leads to the name seen in the form of Cu-rran. The Uí Liatháin descended from Eochu Liathán ("Eochu the Grey"), son of Dáire Cerbba, who was, according to the Munster epic Forbhais Droma Dámhgháire, king of Medón Mairtine. According to the Annals of Inisfallen, the modern-day presence of the Curran family in County Kerry is the result of the war in 1177 between Domnall Mór Ua Briain, King of Thomond, and Diarmait Mor Mac Carthaigh, during which the Uí Meic Caille fled across the Lee; for some this departure was permanent, with many Currans becoming Kerry gentry. Descendants Thomas and Dowenald O Corran were amongst those summoned to serve in arms against the Earl of Desmond in 1345. The Donegal sept of the clan were asked by the O Neills to assist them against the English in the mid 1500s which they did.

The surname Curran is common in all four provinces in Ireland, but especially in County Donegal and throughout Ulster. The name is also prevalent in the south of Ireland, appearing many times in the County Tipperary Hearth Money Rolls of 1665-7. Currans showed up frequently as Waterford residents in the census of 1659.

The 1901 census in Kerry counted 142 Curran or Currane families. Though Curran is the standard form of the name, in Kerry the form Currane is more common. Other modern synonyms include Kirrane, Corhen and Curreen. From older synonyms Gilbert Caran was a witness to the 1157 Mc Loughlin charter of Newry. The origin of the word comes from Ó Corrin, or Ó Cooraidhin; both derive from corradh, meaning spear. The ancient Irish crest of the Currans shows three Curraghs which carry the claim that they may well have been the inventors of the ancient Irish craft.

In the Middle Ages, the Currans were a family of distinguished ecclesiastics. Simon Ó Currin, a Dominican friar who died in 1302, served as Bishop of Kilfenora. Andrew Ó Curran, a Benedictine, was appointed prior of Glasscarrif in 1411. James Ó Corren or O'Currin (Séamus Ó Cuirrín) was Bishop of Killaloe from 1526 to 1542.

Perhaps the most famous Currans in Irish history are John Philpot Curran and his daughter, Sarah Curran. J.P. (1750–1817) was born in Newmarket, County Cork, but his political career brought him to Dublin, where he studied at Trinity College. Curran settled his family in Rathfarnam and rose to prominence as an orator, patriot, and lawyer. He was a Protestant, but he earned his initial fame in protecting the rights of an ill-treated Catholic clergyman. During his career he defended many United Irishmen.

His daughter Sarah (1781–1808) is known historically as a romantic and tragic figure. She was engaged to rebel leader Robert Emmet, who was executed after the rising of 1803. Because her engagement to a rebel risked the ruination of her father's career, Sarah was outcast from the Rathfarnam home, and was obliged to take refuge with friends in Cork. Curran later married, but it is said that she never recovered from the loss of Emmet, and died of a broken heart. Her story inspired the Thomas Moore ballad "She is Far From the Land", which laments:

She is far from the land where her young hero sleeps And lovers around her are sighing; But coldly she turns from their gaze and weeps For her heart in his grave is lying.

Surprisingly, the most famous Irish American Curran is none other than legendary star Gene Kelly (1912–1996). Born Eugene Curran Kelly, this singer, dancer, choreographer, actor and director was the son of one Harriet Curran Kelly. Kelly's maternal grandfather moved to America from County Clare in the 1800s. His dancing skill revolutionized movie musicals, and his 1952 hit Singin' in the Rain is one of the finest and most loved screen musicals.

Other Currans have also impacted the performing arts. San Franciscans celebrate the thriving Curran Theater, founded in 1922 by Homer Curran (d. 1952). Sean Curran (b. 1962) is a choreographer and modern dancer who got his start by training in traditional Irish step dancing. A former member of the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, he now heads up the Sean Curran Dance Company. He won a Bessie Award in 1996 for performance and choreography. His father, John Curran, hosts The Sound of Erin, a Boston radio show, and is a founding member of the Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Éireann branch in Boston.

Douglas Curran (1942-) was a member of the popular vocal trio, The Lettermen from 1969-1971, temporarily for Jim Pike who was experiencing voice problems. In addition to touring with Tony Butala, and Gary Pike, he also recorded three albums with the group: I Have Dreamed (May 1969), Hurt So Bad (October 1969) and Traces / Memories (Jan. 1970).

Curran artists also include Pearl Gildersleeve Curran (1875–1941), who brought Irish music to the mountains of Colorado. This accomplished pianist and violinist also worked as a composer. Charles Courtney Curran (1861–1942) was a Kentucky-born impressionist painter.

The monastic Currans of medieval Ireland must have passed on a penchant for the faith to their Irish-American descendants. John Joseph Curran (1859–1936) was the son of Irish immigrants from County Mayo, Ireland. Before becoming a Roman Catholic priest in 1887, he began his working life at the age of eight, as a slate picker in the Pennsylvania coal mines, where his older brother also worked. Curran rose to prominence because of his sympathies with the coal miners. He even served as an intermediary between the White House and the United Mine Workers Union during industry disputes. During those years, he became close to President Theodore Roosevelt, who described Curran as a "first-class type of priest, the kind of priest needed in a democracy."

Charles E. Curran is another Roman Catholic priest. A professor and writer, he stirred controversy in the Catholic Church during the 1980s for his liberal views on sexual ethics. Other current notable Irish-American Currans include Denis Curran, the Director and President (International) of Bank and Ireland Asset Management, and double honoree of Irish America's "Wall Street 50." John P. Curran, President of Curran Capital Management, was also named to the "Wall Street 50."

In politics, Frank Earl Curran served as mayor of San Diego, California from 1963 to 1972.

Usage examples of "curran".

Pulling the scarf from her head, Bess Curran knocked at the door of number 206.

THAT same Sunday morning Michael Curran awakened, stretched, and stacked his hands behind his head, loath to stir and rise.

Chapter Seven DY Curran dropped into a lopsided upholstered rocker and Rreached into his pocket for his bag of pot.

Bess and Michael Curran were married in a simple service in the rectory of St.

For Bygones she placed Bess Curran in the town where the Spencers themselves live- LaVyrle Spar Stillwater, Minnesota.

Will Curran, psychiatrist and hog-riding fool, would have a field day with her.

Not just because of his training but also because William Curran and Andrew Ingraham had attended the same schools for the first twelve years of their education.

For all his joking and whimsy, Will Curran was a shrewd judge of people.

It was as if Curran poured his life into his house, while Drew held a more practical view, believing that a house is but a shelter from the elements.

Everyone at the convention had all the elements to some degree, but Curran knew it was a question of which motivation was dominant.

Quickly, Curran had upped the stakes, punching in 53 thousand New Yen and forcing out all but the final two before the Lull.

Rabinall had wanted to buy a Whitey Lockman from him, but Curran had demurred at the last moment, stubbornly refusing to come down a final notch in price.

Philpot Curran was born at Newmarket, a small village in the county of Cork, on the 24th of July, 1750.

His father, James Curran, was seneschal of the manor, and possessed of a very moderate income.

Young Curran was an attentive listener at every exhibition of the show.