Mancini's birth surname was Sealy. Sealy was the surname of his Dublin father, who died when Terry was aged seven. His mother re-married and her son consequently became a Mancini in name along with her.
A few years ago, the Sunday Independent reported that Cascarino's mother was granted Irish citizenship unbeknownst to her and without her consent: http://www.independent.ie/irish-news...-26257148.htmlCas had an Irish mother, doesn't matter that she was adopted by Cas' grandfather.
I don't see why, as this article makes out, the name of Theresa O'Malley/Cascarino would have required adding to the Foreign Births Register in order to validate her son's Irish citizenship and eligibility as, although born in England to non-Irish parents, she would surely have become an automatic Irish citizen by virtue of her adoption by a Mayo father. I'm open to correction on that and haven't trawled through the legislation for once, but I'm pretty sure she would have automatically acquired Irish citizenship by virtue of the adoption and that her citizenship would have been formally considered effective from the date of adoption at the latest. As a result, I believe Tony would have been entitled to be included on the Foreign Births Register without his mother's name also requiring addition. She was already an Irish citizen anyway.Originally Posted by The Sunday Independent
Whilst original reports suggested Davies had two Irish grandparents, I have a feeling it was just a grandmother of Davies' who happened to be born in Ireland whilst her father was on military duty with the British army. Isn't that what Liam George claimed the other day?Davies has Irish born grandparents who just happened to be born in Ireland while the great grandparents were on a tour of duty or something, his grandparents have no recollection of Ireland.
An admission of fallibility? You've gone soft, TOWK!
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