When it comes to researching the history of County Tipperary—the
homeland of my husband’s Tully and Flannery forebears—it evidently pays to
double-check the experts.
It was charming, upon discovering the page on The Irish Times section, “Irish
Ancestors,” to read that the meaning of the Irish phrase for “County Tipperary”
was “House of the Well of Ara.” I was quite thankful to stumble upon that
little tidbit. After all, since I don’t know the Irish language, how was I to
know what “Tiobraid Árann” meant?
Running that phrase through Google Translate unfortunately
didn’t return quite the same verdict. According to Google, “Tiobraid Árann”
means—you’ll love this—“Tipperary.”
I dunno. Maybe Google’s Irish isn’t old
enough….
The homeland of our Tullys and Flannerys was evidently not
only a happenin’ place, but an old one. County
Tipperary was one of the
earlier counties to be designated in Ireland. In fact, it was made so in
a political decision dating back to 1328.
No, make that 1210.
Oh, well, certainly earlier than any of our Tullys or Flannerys.
County
Tipperary was also
apparently a cutting edge place. The site of a line drawn in the sand as
significant as any Mason Dixon line. And as close to the forefront of any
Hatfield and McCoy feud as you’d want to get.
In the case of the Irish, it was the O’Briens and the
McCarthys who were at “the front line of the endless battles between the two.” (Spoiler:
the O’Briens won; the McCarthys got sent packing for Cork.)
The county has long been seen as a land in two parts. Up
until a reform act that went into effect only in June of this year, the county
was administered under two separate councils: the North Tipperary County
Council and the South Tipperary County Council.
Back in the time of our Tully and Flannery ancestors, it
wasn’t much different. Only then—and, apparently, up through the year 2001—the
Griffith’s Valuation labeled the two divisions the “North Riding” and the “South
Riding.”
Our Tully and Flannery folks in Ballina were decidedly on
the north side—so north, in fact, that if they had crossed over the River
Shannon, they would have entered into the next county.
With map in hand—both that offered with the Griffith’s Valuation at the time of our
ancestors’ emigration, and a modern roadmap—we’ll soon be tracing those routes
in Ballina and in the likely townland of their residence, Tountinna. While I
doubt we will be able to discover any role these families played in the ages-old
battles waged in the vicinity—or safe haven they might have found to avoid the conflicts—there
are apparently local history resources which may help us gain a “sense of place”
about our ancestors’ homeland. Just yesterday in Claire Santry’s Irish Genealogy News, a lecture series in County Tipperary was announced. While it is
unlikely that I’ll be able to participate in this program, the post does lead
me to a local resource I can follow up on: the Tipperary County
Museum.
Searching in vain for a website in the documentation on that
program, I ran across the county government website, which included links for both
their heritage centres and their genealogy centre. Yes, centre. This is Ireland.
Finding those resources reminded me of a tip from my
daughter, shortly before she left for Ireland:
don’t perform searches about Ireland
on Google. Use google.ie.
It makes sense. I tried it—and while I ended up finding a
website for the Tipperary Museum that was not
the museum I was seeking (evidently, the County
museum does not have its own separate website), I did find some different references that
failed to appear in the all-knowing search engine we know as Google.
It always pays to double-check. Even the experts. Even
Google.
Above: "A View on the Shannon," 1828 oil on canvas by Dublin native James Arthur O'Connor; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
It's a long way to Tipperary. I wonder which one they meant, north or south. :)
ReplyDeleteAnd where is this well of "Ara"?
Well, Iggy, I'm afraid I'd have to dig much deeper into the annals of Irish history to discover that, but I'm sure there is an explanation somewhere about where--or who--Ara might have been.
DeleteAs for north or south, I know that one for sure: the Tully family was in the North Riding section of Griffith's Valuation, and that corresponded to what was later termed North Tipperary. On a map, you can easily see the northern position of the town of Ballina in relation to the rest of the county.
Of course, the song was likely referring to the town of Tipperary, not the county. But I'll claim it as part of our heritage. It certainly put Tipperary on the map in the eyes of the world.