County of Fingal
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County of Fingal Contae Fhine Gall |
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Location | ||
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Statistics | ||
Province: | Leinster | |
County seat: | Swords | |
Code: | D (FL proposed) | |
Area: | 448.07 km² | |
Population (2006) | 239,813 | |
Website: www.fingal.ie |
The County of Fingal (Irish: Contae Fhine Gall, meaning County of the Foreign Tribe) is a county in Ireland. It was formed from part of the historic County Dublin.
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[edit] Etymology
The Vikings referred to the area as Dyflinarskiri, the hinterland of Dublin. The original name, however, derived from the old Gaelic Fionn Gall, meaning fair strangers, denoting the Norse, whereas south county Dublin was called Dubh Gall, denoting the occupying Danes. Early Anglo-Norman versions of the name include the similar Fiehengall, Fynnegal, Fyngal, and Finegal, which led to the mis-identification with Fine Gall.
Fingalian is an extinct language, a hybrid of Old English and Old Norse, with Gaelic influences, which was spoken by the people of Fingal until the mid-1800s.
[edit] History
The first administrative identity going by a variant of the original name was the grant of the Lordship of Fingal, a Prescriptive Barony, confirmed by letters patent from King John to Walter de Lacy and his heirs in perpetuity, in 1208, and based on the latter's father Hugh de Lacy's holding the same on a basis of grand serjeanty for his services as bailiff to the King. The lordship of Fingal was a paramount superiority over several sub-infeudated smaller baronies (such as Castleknock, Santry, Balrothery), and thus eventually accrued vicecomital attributes leading to the granting of the first viscountcy in Ireland in 1478 to a Preston, Lord Gormanston, the Premier Viscount of Ireland, who at the time was the main landowner in the area, and a direct descendant of Walter de Lacy. That viscountcy was called after Gormanston as the latter was the principle seat and Manor of the Prestons at the time, having been acquired upon their relinquishment of occupancy of the Manor of Fyngallestoun. The Viscounts Gormanston continued to retain the Lordship of the latter under reversion.
The heraldic crest for Fingal reads "Flúirse Talaimh is Mara" meaning "Abundance of Land and Water". The motto reflects the strong farming and fishing ties historically associated with the area. It also features a Viking longboat, which represents the arrival of the Norse in Fingal, where they became integrated with the existing Irish.
In 1210, Fingal was included in County Dublin, one of the first twelve counties created by King John during the shiring of Ireland. Over the centuries, Fingal included several other baronies, namely Finglas, Feltrim, Howth, Shankill, and Swords. A peerage title as Earl of Fingall was created in 1628, by King Charles I of England, and granted to Lucas Plunkett, Baron Fingall, whose first wife, Elizabeth O'Donnell of Tyrconnell thus became 1st Countess of Fingall. The Plunketts also intermarried with the Prestons, Viscounts Gormanston. The title went extinct upon the death of the 12th and last Earl in 1984, along with a peerage barony of the same name, not to be confused with the titular prescriptive barony of Fingal, long retained by the Viscount Gormanston as an incorporeal hereditament in gross, until passed to the late Patrick Denis O'Donnell.
[edit] County status
The area of Fingal, which had been recognised in various historical accounts throughout the Middle Ages (most notably the Annals of the Four Masters), was raised to county status on 1 January 1994, through the Local Government (Dublin) Act, 1993 and more formally in the Local Government Act, 2001, with the division of old County Dublin into three new counties. Under the latter law, Fingal is determined and listed as a county.[1]
Fingal covers the coastal area north of the city of Dublin along the Irish Sea and south of the River Delvin to the River Liffey, and it is bordered by County Meath, County Kildare and South Dublin County.
Fingal County Council, the local government authority, has its main offices in Swords and Blanchardstown.
[edit] Economy and society
Fingal is Ireland’s primary horticultural region, producing 50% of the national vegetable output and 75% of all glasshouse crops grown in the country.[citation needed] However, the areas of production are coming under severe pressure from other development and the rural towns are increasingly becoming dormitories for the City. Howth harbour is the biggest fishing harbour on the east coast and the fifth largest in the country.
Fingal itself is the fifth largest local government area in Ireland by population. The largest urban center in Fingal is Blanchardstown, and the second largest Swords, with other important centres of population at Balbriggan, Castleknock, Howth, Malahide, and many other Dublin residential suburbs.
The Institute of Technology, Blanchardstown and Dublin International Airport are located within the county.
In 2006 Fingal County Council was lauded by prominent Irish construction industry figures, politicians and EU Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs for becoming the first local authority in Ireland to introduce mandatory sustainable building requirements.[2][3] The policy, which relates to all construction in 8 parts of the county--including roughly 13,000 new homes--stipulates that the amount of energy and CO2 emissions associated with the heating and hot water of all buildings must be reduced by at least 60% compared to Irish Building Regulations, with at least 30% of the energy used for heating and hot water coming from renewable sources such as solar, geothermal or biomass.
According to the Irish National Census returns for 2006, published by the Government's Central Statistics Office, Fingal is the youngest and fastest growing county in Ireland, with the most economically active population, thus in the fastest growing economy in the European Union.[4]
[edit] Towns and villages
Fingal varies enormously in character, from densely-populated areas of the contiguous Dublin metropolitan to remote rural villages and almost-unpopulated agricultural townlands.
- Balbriggan, Baldoyle, Ballyboghil, Bayside, Blanchardstown
- Castleknock, Castaheaney, Clonee, Clonsilla, Corduff
- Donabate
- Garristown
- Hollystown
- Howth
- Lusk
- Malahide, Mulhuddart
- Naul
- Oldtown, Ongar
- Portmarnock, Portrane
- Rush
- Rolestown (Rowlestown)
- Skerries, Swords, Sutton
- Tyrrelstown
Fingal County Council also takes responsibility for the northern-most parts of Ballymun, Santry and Finglas. The part of Kilbarrack now known as Bayside, along with Sutton and Howth, were transferred from the city of Dublin in a somewhat controversial move. Clonee, a former rural area now heavily built-up, crosses the boundary between the old County of Dublin and Meath, while Ongar is a newly-created residential development seeking to develop a "village" amenity.
[edit] County Council
Fingal County Council has 24 directly elected members. The current méara (English: mayor) is Alan Farrell. The members since the local election in 2004 are:
Labour: 6
- Tom Kelleher*
- Gerry McGuire*
- Michael O'Donovan*
- Peter Coyle*
- Peggy Hamill*
- Ciaran Byrne*
Fine Gael: 5
- Anne Devitt*
- Alan Farrell
- Joan Maher*
- Michael Joe Cosgrave*
- Eithne Loftus**
Fianna Fáil: 5
- Eoghan O'Brien**
- Margaret Richardson*
- Darragh Butler**
- Brenda Clifford
- Mags Murray***
Greens: 3
- Robert Kelly*
- David Healy
- Joe Corr
Sinn Féin: 1
- Paul Donnelly**
Independent: 2
- David O’Connor*
- May McKeon (IFF)
(* denotes councillors who were re-elected; ** denotes councillors co-opted in 2007; *** denotes resignation from the PDs to Fianna Fail.)
[edit] References
[edit] Bibliography
- Fingal and its Churches - A Historical Sketch, by Robert Walsh, M. A., Dublin and London, 1888.
- Rotuli Chartarum in Turri Londinensi Asservati, edited by Thomas Duffus Hardy, published in 1837. (Available in the Tower of London and in the Guildhall Library, London, it contains original text of the Grant of Fingal by King John in 1208).
- The Calendar of the Gormanston Register, Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, edited by James Mills and M.J. McEnery, University Press, Dublin, 1916. The Gormanston Register is a collection of ancient manuscripts going back to the 12th century, belonging to the Viscounts Gormanston, and now lodged in the National Library of Ireland, in Dublin.
- History of Killeen Castle, by Mary Rose Carty, published by Carty / Lynch, Dunsany, County Meath, Ireland, April 1991 (ISBN 0-9517382-0-8). This includes a history of the Earls of Fingall - page 18 refers to Lucas Plunkett, the 1st Earl of Fingall, whose first wife was Elizabeth O'Donnell of Tyrconnell, 1st Countess of Fingall.
- Blood Royal - From the time of Alexander the Great to Queen Elizabeth II, by Charles Mosley (genealogist), published for Ruvigny Ltd, London, 2002 (O'Donnell listed as Baron of Fyngal, page v) ISBN 0-9524229-9-9
- History of the County of Dublin, by Francis Elrington Ball, Dublin, 1902.
- History of the County of Dublin, by John D'Alton, Esq., M.R.I.A. Hodges and Smith, Dublin, 1838.
- Dublin City and County: From Prehistory to Present, edited by F.H.A. Allen and Kevin Whelan, Geography Publications, Dublin, 1992 [ISBN 0-906602-19-X].
- Seventy Years Young, Memoirs of Elizabeth, Countess of Fingall, by Elizabeth Burke Plunkett, Lady Fingall. First published by Collins of London in 1937; 1991 edition published by The Lilliput Press, Dublin 7, Ireland [ISBN 0 946640 74 2]. This Elizabeth was a Burke from Moycullen in County Galway, who married the 11th Earl of Fingall, and should not be confused with Elizabeth O'Donnell, 1st Countess of Fingal.
[edit] External links
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