Wednesday, 31 December 2025

AI thinks one my O Hara ancestors, Anthony O Hara, likely met Kappodistrias in Russia

 Anthony O Hara, from the Catholic branch of the Sligo O Hara familylike my Irish grandmother, may have met Ioannis Kapodistrias according to AI.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valentine_O%27Hara#:~:text=His%20two%20best%2Dknown%20books%20are,House%2C%20near%20Collooney%2C%20County%20Sligo.

I do see something of a  common mindset and common values with Russia being the common denominator.

Can Russia again become a diplomatich force in Europe working with allies to oust the enemies of humanity, the war mongers,covid jab killers and private banksters of the Epstein circle?

While specific direct meeting records aren't immediately obvious, 
Anthony O'Hara (a Knight of Malta involved with Russia, d. 1823) and Ioannis Kapodistrias (Russian Foreign Minister & Greece's First Governor) were contemporaries deeply embedded in Russian imperial and diplomatic circles, making an encounter highly probable, especially given O'Hara's service under figures Kapodistrias interacted with, though direct evidence needs digging into biographies like Valentine O'Hara's memoir. 
Key Connections:
  • Time Overlap: O'Hara lived until 1823, while Kapodistrias rose to prominence in Russian service in the early 1800s, serving Tsar Alexander I.
  • Shared Environment: Both were high-ranking individuals within the orbit of the Russian Empire and the Knights of Malta, a Catholic military order that had complex ties with Russia.
  • O'Hara's Role: He was a Knight of Malta known for his Russian service, a background that would intersect with Kapodistrias, who was Russia's Foreign Minister and a key diplomat. 
To confirm a meeting:
  • You'd need to consult detailed biographies, particularly Valentine O'Hara's 1938 memoir, *Anthony O'Hara, Knight of Malta: memoir of a Russian diehard*, or archival documents from the Russian Foreign Ministry. 
Given their positions, it's very likely their paths crossed in St. Petersburg or during diplomatic missions, even if not prominently recorded in general histories.

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