County Offaly

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County Offaly
Contae Uíbh Fhailí
Coat of arms of County Offaly
Location
Map highlighting County Offaly
Statistics
Province: Leinster
County Town: Tullamore
Code: OY
Area: 1,999 km²
Population (2006) 70,604
Website: www.offaly.ie

County Offaly (Irish: Contae Uíbh Fhailí, derived from "Ua Fáilghe") is a county in Leinster, Ireland, bordered by seven other counties: Galway, Roscommon, Westmeath, Meath, Kildare, Laois, and Tipperary. Originally the Kingdom of Uí Failghe, it was formed in 1556 by Mary I of England during one of the Plantations of Ireland, it was originally named King's County, after King Philip II of Spain and the county town was Daingean until the eighteenth century.

The southern part of the county is occupied by the Slieve Bloom Mountains, the northwestern part is the floodplain of the River Shannon and the remainder consists of large bogs including the Bog of Allen and Boora Bog.

Birr in the south of the county is best known for its castle and gardens. The Castle [1], owned by the Parsons family, (the family bears the title: 'Earl of Rosse') is best known for its 19th century telescope. Before the plantation of modern day Offaly by English settlers, the territories it comprises were controlled principally by the O'Connor clan in the North/East of the county and the O'Carrolls clan in the south.

Anglo-Protestant writer William Trevor (KBE) was born in County Offaly, and raised in County Cork, Irish Free State, and has written of his experiences growing up as a Protestant in that time and place.

[edit] Towns in Offaly

The main town in the county is Tullamore, while smaller settlements include:

[edit] External links