Mourne (barony)

Mourne
Múrna[1](Irish)

Location of Mourne, County Down, Northern Ireland.
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Country Northern Ireland
County Down

Mourne (named after the Múrna[1]) is a barony in County Down, Northern Ireland.[2] It lies in the south-east of the county, with the Irish Sea to its east. It is bordered by two other baronies: Iveagh Upper, Lower Half and Iveagh Upper, Upper Half to the north and west.[2] Mourne gets its name from the Múrna (Old Irish: Mughdorna), a people who hail originally from a territory of the same name in modern County Monaghan.[3]

Ancient history

The Múrna

The Múrna are described as being a powerful people in the "archaic" period and possibly either being a pre-Celtic or very early Celtic people who may have been rulers of Ulster before the ascendancy of the Ulaid.[3] Early genealogists would claim that they descend from Mughdhorn Dubh, a son of Colla Menn, however this has been rebuked as a figment of imagination and as politically fashionable at the time.[3] Indeed Mighdorna is listed as being one of the territories conquered from the Ulaidh by the Three Collas with Colla Menn taking possession of Mughdorna.[3] The O'Hanratties are stated as having anciently possessed this territory.[3]

Bairrche

Bairrche is the ancient name of the Mourne territory and originally the Mourne Mountains had also been named Beanne-Boirche ("Boirche's peaks").[4] According to the Dinnsenchus they were named after a shepherd called Boirche who herded on the mountains the cattle of Ross, son of Imchadh, a king of Ulster in the third century.[4] The Dinnsenchus states that his favourite look-out point was the highest peak in the mountain range, hence why the mountains received the name.[4] Alternatively they are named after Bécc Bairrche mac Blathmaic, a king of the Ulaid during the 7th and 8th centuries.

According to the Annals of Ulster around 1165 the Ua Eochadha asked Muircertach Ua Lochlainn, High-King of Ireland, that the kingship of Ulidia be given to Eochaidh Mac Duinn Sleibhe.[5] In return they gave pledges for everyone in Ulidia to Ua Lochlainn as well as many of their treasures.[5] Mac Duinnsleibhe also gave the territory of Bairrche to Ua Lochlainn, who then gave it to Donnchadh Ó Cearbhaill (English: O'Carroll) of Louth, lord of Airgialla.[3][5]

Migration of the Múrna to Bairrche

By the 11th and 12th centuries the Múrna in Monaghan had become subordinate to the Ui Chremthainn, ruled by the powerful Ó Cearbhaill (English: O'Carroll). The last king of Mughdorna, Maolruanaigh Ó Machainen (O'Machoiden), is recorded in the Annals of Ulster as being slain in 1110.[5]

In the latter half of the 12th century, a group of the Múrna emigrated from Cremorne (Irish: Crioch Mughdurna) to south Down where they settled in Bairrche to form a new kingdom.[3] It is suggested that Donnchadh Ó Cearbhaill, being lord of Airgialla which included the original territory of the Múrna, having just received the territory of Bairrche may have transplanted them to the area to reinforce his control over it.[3] They would rename Bairrche and its mountains after their tribal name, hence the present-day names of Mourne and the Mourne Mountains.[3]

O'Dugan lists O'Machoiden as being rulers in the 12th century of Mourne in County Down.[6]

Annals of Ulster

The Annals of Ulster state for Bairrche:[5]

List of settlements

Below is a list of settlements in Mourne:[7][8]

Towns

Villages

List of civil parishes

Below is a list of civil parishes in Mourne:[9][10][8]

References

  1. 1 2 Ulster Place Names - Down Council Area, page 59.
  2. 1 2 PRONI Baronies of Northern Ireland
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Magoo - The Mughdorna
  4. 1 2 3 Mughdhorna - The Origin and History of Irish Names of Places (6th edition 1891), by P. W. Joyce (volume I, pages 137–8).
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition - Annals of Ulster
  6. Library Ireland - The Principal Families of Ulster: In Ulidia, or Down and part of Antrim
  7. Logainm - Mourne
  8. 1 2 "Mourne". IreAtlas Townlands Database. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  9. PRONI Civil Parishes of County Down
  10. Baronies and civil parishes of County Down

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