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Felling 07.07.21.Xlsx
Licences to be advertised 07/07/2021 FL App Ref Date Recieved Scheme DED Townland County Digitised Area (HA) Date Advertised Last date for Submissions CE01-FL0218 29/06/2021 Clearfell BALLYEA DED Derry Clare 10.67 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE01-FL0219 18/06/2021 Clearfell RATH DED Carrowduff, Craggaunboy, Kihaska Clare 14.69 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE01-FL0221 18/06/2021 Clearfell KILFENORA DED,LISDOONVARNA DED,SMITHSTOWN DED Boghil, Fanta Glebe Clare 8.72 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE01-FL0233 18/06/2021 Clearfell ANNAGH DED Shanavogh East, Doonsallagh East Clare 10.69 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE02-FL0242 16/04/2021 Clearfell GLENDREE DED Uggoon Upper Clare 3.45 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE02-FL0244 18/06/2021 Clearfell GLENDREE DED,LOUGHEA DED Maghera, Glendree Clare 11.23 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE02-FL0251 29/06/2021 Clearfell CAHER DED Gortnamearacaun, Scalpnagown Clare 9.03 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE03-FL0214 05/07/2021 Clearfell CAPPAGHABAUN DED Pollagoona Mountain Clare 14.93 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE03-FL0216 05/07/2021 Clearfell CAHERMURPHY DED Slieveanore Clare 1.76 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE03-FL0217 05/07/2021 Clearfell CAHERMURPHY DED Slieveanore Clare 11.54 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE03-FL0228 05/07/2021 Clearfell CAPPAGHABAUN DED Pollagoona Mountain, Loughatorick South Clare 15.7 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE05-FL0116 18/06/2021 Clearfell CAHERHURLEY DED Caherhurly Clare 5.58 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE05-FL0121 27/05/2021 Clearfell LACKAREAGH DED Lackareagh More Clare 14.99 07/07/2021 06/08/2021 CE05-FL0123 18/06/2021 Clearfell CAHERHURLEY DED Caherhurly -
6108 the London Gazette, November 29, 1864
6108 THE LONDON GAZETTE, NOVEMBER 29, 1864. merit's, -sluices, walls, dams, reservoirs, cuts, watercourses, as may be necessary for carrying "drains, roads, 'culverts, and other works as may the said works into execution ; and the said Act be necessary in connection therewith; and to vest will vary and extinguish all rights and privileges in said Company such portion of the said waste relating to the same, and to the lands to be lands as will be embanked, enclosed, drained, or embanked and reclaimed as aforesaid, or which reclaimed as aforesaid. would in any way interfere with any of its objects, 7. To authorise the Company to make and and it will confer other rights and privileges maintain the following works or some of them, in relation thereto. ^ _ • with all necessary and proper conveniences con- And further, in the said Act power will be nected therewith respectively (that is to say) :— taken to sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the said -waste lands when the same shall have been ., A.—An embankment commencing at the north embanked and reclaimed as aforesaid, and to western corner of the present embankment raise money on the security thereof by mortgage or sea wall, at or on Bhuie or Glenagh Point, or rent charge, or in such other manner as wul be in the townland of Clenagh, in the parish of defined by the said Act ; arid further, if necessary, Kilmaleery, and running thence in a direc- to levy an acreage rate or poundage on the owners tion nearly west, for a distance of 3 furlongs or occupiers of the lands when so embanked and and 166 yards or thereabouts, thence passing reclaimed, for the maintenance and repair of the in a direction nearly south, and nearly paral- embankment and other works. -
Enright Patrick Clare Drumcliff
Results 41 to 60 of 69 Occupier Surname Occupier Forename County Parish ENRIGHT PATRICK CLARE DRUMCLIFF ENRIGHT JOHN CLARE INAGH ENRIGHT JOHN CLARE INAGH ENRIGHT JAMES CLARE INAGH ENRIGHT JOHN CLARE INAGH ENRIGHT JAMES CLARE INAGH CULLINAN JOAN CLARE INAGH CULLINAN JOAN CLARE INAGH HENNESSY MARY CLARE INAGH ENRIGHT JOHN CLARE MOYARTA ENRIGHT JOHN CLARE MOYARTA ENRIGHT SINON CLARE MOYARTA ENRIGHT MARTIN CLARE MOYARTA ENRIGHT JOHN CLARE MOYARTA ENRIGHT RICHARD CLARE KILRUSH ENRIGHT JOHN CLARE CCK2ILRUSH STEWART JOHN CLARE Griffith's Valuation KRIeLcRoUrSdH Information ENRIGHT THOMAS Tenant CLARE KILRUSH Family Name 1 ENRIGHT ENRIGHT JOHN CLARE KILRUSH Forename 1 SINON LODGERS CLARE KILRUSH Landlord Family ResultsName 2 41 to 60 of 69 In Chancery Forename 2 Location County CLARE Griffith's Valuation material (digital images and index) is Copyright of (c)2003 OMS Services Ltd, Eneclann Ltd and the National Library of Ireland. Barony MOYARTA A UnionChanging Libraries Initiative - This site and all contentKILRUSH is made available under respective copyrights. Parish Supported by the Department of the Environment,MOYAR CommunityTA and Local Government. Townland QUERRIN Place Name QUERRIN Place Type TOWNLAND Publication Details Position on Page 22 Printing Date 1855 Act 15&16 Sheet Number 66 Map Reference 55 User Contributions You can now upload your own information, photos, audios and videos to the details of each Griffith's Valuation record. Please click the grey upload button to start your own upload. Below, you can see material uploaded by other users of the site Additional information has not yet been added to this record by upload users. Z. -
Inspectors of Irish Fisheries Report
REPORT OF THE INSPECTORS OF IRISH FISHERIES ON THE SEA AND INLAND FISHERIES OF IRELAND, FOR 1888. Presented to Both Houses of Parliament by Command oh Her Majesty DUBLIN: PRINTED FOR HER MAJESTY’S STATIONERY OFFICE BY ALEXANDER THOM & CO. (Limited), And to be purchased, either directly or through any Bookseller, from Eyre and Spottiswoode, East Harding-street, Fetter-lane, E.C., or 32, Abingdon-street, Westminster, S.W.; or Adam and Charles Black, 6, North Bridge, Edinburgh ; or Hodges, Figgis, and Co., 104, Grafton-strect, Dublin. 1889, j-Q—5777.] Price Is. CONTENTS. Page. REPORT,..................................................................................................................................................... 5 APPENDIX,..................................................................................................................................................... 80 Appendix SEA AND OYSTER FISHERIES. No. 1. —Abstract of Returns from Coast Guard, ....... 80 2. —Statistics of Fish landed on the Irish Coast during the year 1888, .... 81 3. —By-Laws in force, .......... 82 4. —Oyster Licenses revoked, ......... 88 5. —Oyster Licenses in force, ......... 90 Irish Reproductive Loan Fund and Sea and Coast Fisheries Fund. 6. —Proceedings for the year 1888, and Total amount of Loans advanced, and Total Repayments under Irish Reproductive Loan Fund for thirteen years ending 31st December, 1888, 94 7. —Loans applied for and advanced under Sea and Coast Fisheries Fund for the year ending 31st December, 1888, .......... 94 8. —Amounts available and applied for, 1888, ... ... 95 9. —Total Amounts Advanced, the Total Repayments, the Amounts of Bonds or Promissory Notes given as Security, since Fund transferred in 1884 to be administered by Fishery Depart ment, to 31st December, 1888, together with the Balance outstanding, and the Amount in Arrear, ......... 96 10. —Fishery Loans during the year ending 31st December, 1888, .... -
Central Statistics Office, Information Section, Skehard Road, Cork
Published by the Stationery Office, Dublin, Ireland. To be purchased from the: Central Statistics Office, Information Section, Skehard Road, Cork. Government Publications Sales Office, Sun Alliance House, Molesworth Street, Dublin 2, or through any bookseller. Prn 443. Price 15.00. July 2003. © Government of Ireland 2003 Material compiled and presented by Central Statistics Office. Reproduction is authorised, except for commercial purposes, provided the source is acknowledged. ISBN 0-7557-1507-1 3 Table of Contents General Details Page Introduction 5 Coverage of the Census 5 Conduct of the Census 5 Production of Results 5 Publication of Results 6 Maps Percentage change in the population of Electoral Divisions, 1996-2002 8 Population density of Electoral Divisions, 2002 9 Tables Table No. 1 Population of each Province, County and City and actual and percentage change, 1996-2002 13 2 Population of each Province and County as constituted at each census since 1841 14 3 Persons, males and females in the Aggregate Town and Aggregate Rural Areas of each Province, County and City and percentage of population in the Aggregate Town Area, 2002 19 4 Persons, males and females in each Regional Authority Area, showing those in the Aggregate Town and Aggregate Rural Areas and percentage of total population in towns of various sizes, 2002 20 5 Population of Towns ordered by County and size, 1996 and 2002 21 6 Population and area of each Province, County, City, urban area, rural area and Electoral Division, 1996 and 2002 58 7 Persons in each town of 1,500 population and over, distinguishing those within legally defined boundaries and in suburbs or environs, 1996 and 2002 119 8 Persons, males and females in each Constituency, as defined in the Electoral (Amendment) (No. -
County Clare
Clare from Atlas and cyclopedia of Ireland. The general history (1905) NAME. The county is named from the little town of Clare, near the mouth of the Fergus : and this got its name from a bridge of planks by which the Fergus was crossed in old times : the Gaelic word clar signifying a board or plank. SIZE AND POPULATION. This county has water all round (namely, the Atlantic, the Shannon, and Lough Derg) except for 40 miles of its north and northeastern margin, where it is bounded by Galway. Greatest length from Loop Head to the boundary near Lough Atorick on the northeastern border, 67 miles ; breadth from Limerick to Black Head (nearly, but not quite, at right angles to the length), 42 miles ; breadth from Black Head to the shore west of Bunratty (at right angles to the length), 35 miles ; area, 1,294 square miles ; population, 141,457. SURFACE. It may be stated in a general way that the northern part and the eastern margin are mountainous or hilly ; and the middle and south form a broad plain, occasionally broken up by low hills, and in one place by a considerable mountain (Slievecallan). The barony of Burren in the north is an extraordinary region of limestone rock, rising into hills of bare gray limestone, the intervening valleys or flats being also composed of limestone, with great blocks strewn over the surface, both hills and valleys being relieved here and there by lovely grassy patches of pure green. MOUNTAINS AND HILLS. The highest summit of the Burren district is Slieve Elva (1,109), a conspicuous flat-topped mountain ; Cappanawalla 1,028) rises direct over Ballyvaghan Bay ; and in the east of the same district is Slievecarran (1,075). -
Recorded Monuments County Clare
Recorded Monuments Protected under Section 12 of the Notional Monuments (Amendment) Act, 1994 County Clare DdchasThe Heritage Service Departmentof The Environment, Heritage and Local Govemment 1998 RECORD OF MONUMENTSAND PLACES as Established under Section 12 of the National Monuments (Amendment) Act 1994 COUNTY CLARE Issued By National Monumentsand Historic Properties Service 1996 Establishment and Exhibition of Record of Monumentsand Places under Section 12 of the National Monuments (Amendment) Act 1994 Section 12 (1) of the National Monuments(Amendment) Act 1994 states the Commissionersof Public Worksin Ireland "shall establish and maintain a record of monumentsand places where they believe there are monumentsand the record shall be comprised of a list of monuments and such places and a map or maps showing each monument and such place in respect of each county in the State. " Section 12 (2) of the Act provides for the exhibition in each county of the list and maps for that county in a manner prescribed by regulations made by the Minister for Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht. The relevant regulations were made under Statutory Instrument No. 341 of 1994, entitled National Monuments(Exhibition of Record of Monuments) Regulations, 1994. This manualcontains the list of monumentsand places recorded under Section 12 (1) of the Act for the Countyof Clare whichis exhibited along with the set of mapsfor the County of Clare showingthe recorded monumentsand places. 0 Protection of Monumentsand Places included in the Record Section 12 (3) of the -
The County Clare Surname Culligan
The County Clare surname, Culligan, also written as Quilligan Author: [email protected] The author is the voluntary administrator of a Colgan surname (including Culligan) male DNA project and would welcome the participation of males who bear the Culligan surname in the study; of course, the initiative for participating in the simple, and inexpensive DNA test may be taken by female relatives or Culligan families acting collectively to cover the testing fee by FamilyTreeDNA.com. Prefatory Note Is Culligan a version of Colgan? MacLysaght writes: “Quilligan, Ó Cuileagáin - This Thomond [regional] name is equally well known in its variant form, Culligan” [McLysaght, A Guide to Irish Surnames, 1994]. In Edward MacLysaght’s Supplement to Irish Families, 1994, he wrote: “Culligan, Quilligan – Both these variants of Ó Cuileagáin are Clare names and are mainly found in that county and.. Limerick city … A century ago Culligan was much more numerous that Quilligan but the numbers are now about equal. Woulfe regards the name as an attenuated form of O’Colgan (which is said, without evidence, to be more correctly MacColgan). This implies that the sept immigrated westwards from Offaly which is to some extent corroborated by a fiant of 1588 where one of that name living in King’s County obtained a pardon. An earlier fiant shows another O’Colligan among the many O’Connors whose location is not mentioned. They were, however, well established in West Clare in the 17th century .. as Cullegane is returned in Petty’s Census as a principal name in the barony of Clonderalaw, Ennis”. This, the author’s Colgan Chronology does not include the surname Quilligan within its ambit. -
Obituaries, Death Notices, Etc. - K
Obituaries, death notices, etc. - K Surname Forename Date of Newspaper Address Notes Kane Emily 05/02/1840 Kildare Street infant dau of Richard D. Kane Kane female (Mrs.) 10/10/1810 Kilrush, Co. Clare late of William St. in this City, widow of James Kane, late of Kilrush, Co. Clare Kane female (Mrs.) 24/05/1820 Castleconnell Kane Frances 26/02/1820 Prospect Hill, Foynes Kane Georgina 15/04/1919 Dublin widow of R. J. Kane, Whitehall, Limerick; death notice Kane Margaret 01/05/1839 dau of Richard D. Kane of Kildare Street Kane Mother Mary Justinian 11/10/1856 Convent of Mercy, Peter's Cell dau of Capt. Kane of White Hall Kane Richard 15/03/1848 Glentworth Street Paymaster County Limerick Royal Militia, Town Councillor, Poor Law Guardian, Agent to the Alliance Insurance Company Kane Richard J. 03/01/1895 Whitehall, Parteen shooting accident (detailed report, 05/01/1895) (funeral report, 08/01/1895) Kane Thomas 20/10/1841 Circular Road of Dublin Kane Thomas 01/04/1926 Cornwall, England son of late Richard Kane, Whitehall, Parteen; death notice (obituary, 01/04/1926) (see also 03/04/1926) Kane Thomas, Dr. 06/03/1890 90 George Street death notice (further report 6/3/1890) (omission 11/3/1890) (funeral notice 8/3/1890) (15/3/1890 sympathy vote) Kane William 08/09/1830 Kane William 03/07/1862 Newcastle West son of late Counsellor Kane Kane William 15/09/1893 Cooliska farming accident Kape Anna Maria 02/08/1823 Whitehall, near Limerick Surname Forename Date of Newspaper Address Notes Kavanagh ? 08/07/1944 33 Catherine Street, Limerick acknowledgement -
A Folklore Survey of County Clare
Folklore ISSN: 0015-587X (Print) 1469-8315 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rfol20 A Folklore Survey of County Clare Thos. J. Westropp To cite this article: Thos. J. Westropp (1911) A Folklore Survey of County Clare, Folklore, 22:3, 332-341, DOI: 10.1080/0015587X.1911.9719486 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0015587X.1911.9719486 Published online: 06 Feb 2012. Submit your article to this journal View related articles Citing articles: 1 View citing articles Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=rfol20 Download by: [University of Toronto Libraries] Date: 27 June 2016, At: 03:12 332 Collectanea. A FOLKLORE SURVEY OF COUNTY CLARE (continued from P- 213)- XVI. Patterns and Religious Rites. THE three chiefpatterns, (or religious rites at wells and holy places), were held on Iniscatha or Scattery Island in the Shannon, at Killone near Ennis, and on Iniscaltra in Lough Derg. To all three thousands of persons came from Clare, Kerry, and more distant counties, until by degrees dissipation crept in and the clergy suppressed the festivals, leaving only a purely devotional shadow. The Scattery pattern was held at the beginning of March, and celebrated St. Senan's victory over the " Cata " monster.1 Its best record is a stone, which I last saw and sketched in 1875 in a garden at Naboclish Lodge in Kilkee, to which it had been brought from Kilrush by the late Capt. Kennedy. It had been brought over from the island to Kilrush when the pattern was suppressed by Dean Kenny,—some say in 1810 and others " before 1827," though the pattern was still celebrated in 1816. -
The Clerical Lineages of Inis Cathaigh1
McInerney Clerical-13 6/9/13 12:47 PM Page 1 The clerical lineages of Inis Cathaigh1 ‘S d’ á n-uimhir oileán Inse Cathaigh Air ar’ chuir an Naomh ba glórmhar beatha Luke McInerney Seanán aén cheann déag de Theampluibh A’s Clogás alainn, árd ‘na dteannta. mac Ionmhainéin, abbot of Inis Cathaigh, later succeeded [Of the number is the isle of Inis Cathaigh as king of Munster,11 while several decades later Inis Cath- On which a Saint of glorious life, aigh was used as a base for plundering operations by the Seanán, placed eleven Churches, Norsemen until Brian mac Cennétig (i.e. Brian Ború) de- And a beautiful high Clogaus beside them]2 feated them, slaying Imhar, the Norse king, and his two Michael O’Brannan [1794] sons Amhlaeibh and Duibhchenn.12 Gaelic-Norse hostility at Inis Cathaigh continued until 990 when the annalistic he late medieval Church in Gaelic territories was accus- record notes a succession of abbots, suggesting that half a Ttomed to a level and form of organisation that differed century of relative stability returned until the sacking of to that which prevailed in the Anglo-Norman areas of the island in 1057.13 Subsequent other annalistic entries Ireland. A distinguishing feature of ecclesiastical organ- refer to attacks and military incursions at Inis Cathaigh for isation in Gaelic territories was the presence of clerical the years 1101 and 1127.14 kindreds who possessed a hereditary right or prerogative to Inis Cathaigh’s pre-eminence as a monastic site and certain Church functions. Often this was in the form of claim as a diocesan centre was halted at the time of the holding the offices of erenagh (airchinneach) or coarb reform of the Irish Church in the twelfth century. -
The List of Church of Ireland Parish Registers
THE LIST of CHURCH OF IRELAND PARISH REGISTERS A Colour-coded Resource Accounting For What Survives; Where It Is; & With Additional Information of Copies, Transcripts and Online Indexes SEPTEMBER 2021 The List of Parish Registers The List of Church of Ireland Parish Registers was originally compiled in-house for the Public Record Office of Ireland (PROI), now the National Archives of Ireland (NAI), by Miss Margaret Griffith (1911-2001) Deputy Keeper of the PROI during the 1950s. Griffith’s original list (which was titled the Table of Parochial Records and Copies) was based on inventories returned by the parochial officers about the year 1875/6, and thereafter corrected in the light of subsequent events - most particularly the tragic destruction of the PROI in 1922 when over 500 collections were destroyed. A table showing the position before 1922 had been published in July 1891 as an appendix to the 23rd Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records Office of Ireland. In the light of the 1922 fire, the list changed dramatically – the large numbers of collections underlined indicated that they had been destroyed by fire in 1922. The List has been updated regularly since 1984, when PROI agreed that the RCB Library should be the place of deposit for Church of Ireland registers. Under the tenure of Dr Raymond Refaussé, the Church’s first professional archivist, the work of gathering in registers and other local records from local custody was carried out in earnest and today the RCB Library’s parish collections number 1,114. The Library is also responsible for the care of registers that remain in local custody, although until they are transferred it is difficult to ascertain exactly what dates are covered.