There is an odd phenomenon surrounding the perception of
castles. Likely, we owe it to the fairy tale existence of our opulent times, in
which we prefer to believe everyone lives happily ever after, all life long.
Castles, however—at least the real
ones, not the ones played on TV—were designed as military strongholds, complete
with gates, towers, and structures meant to fortify inner chambers. And these
devices were not built for mere romantic notions; they were called to use many
times during defensive crises.
Right in the midst of County Kerry, Ireland—the
very place we’re examining as we consider our ancestral heritage of the Kelly
and Falvey families from that location—there were a number of castles. And,
apparently, the crises to accompany their use.
Taking time to gain perspective on the history and geography
of County Kerry, in preparation for our trip there, gives context to the family
history I’m trying to absorb through years of genealogical research. While
there is no way I can reach back to the ancient people and times of County Kerry’s
earliest days, it’s informative to gain that general perspective.
Apparently, the pre-Gaelic people living in this southwest
tip of Ireland
themselves invaded the area in early historical times. These invaders were known as
the “People of Ciar.” Ciar was the legendary founder of the original tribe—himself
son of a legendary king of Ulster—and
the anglicized version of his name provides the source for the name of this
county: Kerry. Ciar, incidentally, meant black or dark brown in old Irish, and is
still used as a word in modern Irish to signify someone with a dark complexion.
For whatever reason, County Kerry
has come to be called “The Kingdom,” though it certainly has seen many changes
in its geopolitical standing from century to century. Through the years, the
history of County
Kerry was tumultuous
enough to warrant the use of such fortifications as Ross Castle—one which, though
embattled since its fifteenth century establishment, is still standing today.
More pertinent to our own family’s history there—at least as
far back as I’ve been able to push my research—waves of rebellions and wars
devastated the area, once home to both fertile valley farmland as well as the
highest mountains on the island. Native lands confiscated from original clans were
transferred to ownership by “planters”—English settlers moved into the county.
Over the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the gradual impoverishment
of the area saw conversion to poor tenant farmers who increasingly became
reliant on their potato crop—that recipe for national disaster we now see so
clearly in retrospect. County
Kerry was so hard hit by
the Great Famine, and the great flow of emigration began—a stream of exiting
people which continued through “recent times.”
What is interesting about the details of this emigration is
that the Kelly family—that of John Kelly, his wife Johanna Falvey Kelly, and
their several children—didn’t leave their home during this initial phase of the
Great Famine. Nor did they wait until the impetus of the Land War of the 1870s
and 1880s. They somehow decided to make their move just before that latter
trouble. Why did they choose to leave at the time they did? They had made it
through the worst of the famine. What had provoked them to make such a choice
to leave? Perhaps it was the dynamics underlying the instigation of that
troubled time, in which tenant farmers became strident about receiving more
reasonable terms from their landlords.
The land John Kelly farmed was in the civil parish of
Molahiffe, which, according to one map, seems to have been situated roughly in
the middle of the county. The particular townland in which John Kelly was
tenant farmer was named Lisheennacannina—a word sounding as magical as our
modern concept of castles. This townland, one of nearly three thousand in the
county and comprised of 366 acres, was situated at the southern tip of the
parish of Molahiffe (number 32 on this map).
There were, of course, many woes more that the county
residents experienced in the years after our Kelly family left home. The
twentieth century brought with it a war of independence, and then a civil war.
The bitterness of these conflicts seemed centered within the boundaries of this
particular county at times—even times after the calling of a truce to
hostilities.
The peaceful ambience of such famed natural beauty as that
of the Lakes of Killarney—Johanna Falvey Kelly’s reputed place of origin—belies
the turmoil of County
Kerry’s history. While I
have no way of knowing why John and Johanna Kelly chose to remove their family
from their homeland in the midst of such a history, there surely had to be
some compelling reason for their choice.
Photograph: Ross Castle in Killarney, County Kerry, in Ireland, circa 1890; from Library of Congress via Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Photograph: Ross Castle in Killarney, County Kerry, in Ireland, circa 1890; from Library of Congress via Wikipedia; in the public domain.
If only you were famous, the staff of "Who Do You Think You Are" would find a handy dandy journal written by some obscure neighbor of the Kellys who would provide the clue to why your family left. I wonder if there are any local histories written by minor writers available in a library in Kerry. Will your organized tour include trips beyond Dublin? (Sorry, I've forgotten.)
ReplyDeleteNo, Wendy, the organized tour is strictly devoted to research in the libraries and government offices in Dublin. However, that will not keep us fearless tourists from organizing our own tour. We plan on doing quite a bit of exploring on the western side of the island for twice as much time as I will be devoting to the books in Dublin. Obscure neighbors of obscure family members notwithstanding, I'll keep your suggestion in mind, and keep an eye out for the chance mention of our Kellys in any local history books. One never knows...
DeleteInteresting information about castles!
ReplyDeleteI know next to nothing about Irish history---do you know how literate the common people even were during that time of your ancestors move? That will certainly impact the type of documentation you will be able to find.
I envy those whose ancestors were quite educated as there seems to be a much greater abundance of material both written by them and about them, as is also the case of those with money, which makes sense since those two tend to go hand in hand.
You're right about that literacy issue, Michelle. I know for one ancestor, that is the case, for he signed his Declaration of Intent with a cross. While I don't know about this Kelly and Falvey family, I feel fairly certain they didn't have any neighbors or relatives who kept extensive journals on their day to day activities!
DeleteApparently, in class today, my daughter went on a field trip in County Cork which included a couple castles--similar, in fact, to this photo. It looks like there will be a few on our trip, as well. While we, today, find castles enchanting, I suspect they reveal a level of turmoil in our Irish ancestors' lives that we need to take into account--even if they were mere tenant farmers.
You are going back into the "dusty" times - 1329?? 1580s?? Wow!
ReplyDeleteI'm thinking the one would need to hope that one of the relatives held a prominent position in the church.. if they were going to get mentioned.
Well, in that regard, we're pretty hopeless...
Delete