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Athenry

Town in County Galway, Ireland

Athenry

Town in County Galway, Ireland

FieldValue
settlement_typeTown
nameAthenry
native_nameBaile Átha an Rí
native_name_langga
image_skylineAthenry Castle.jpg
image_captionAthenry Castle
pushpin_mapIreland
pushpin_label_positionright
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Ireland
coordinates
blank_name_sec1Irish Grid Reference
blank_info_sec1
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameIreland
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Connacht
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2County Galway
unit_prefMetric
elevation_m47
population_as_of2022
population_total4,603
population_footnotes
area_code_typeTelephone area code
area_code+353(0)91
postal_code_typeEircode routing key
postal_codeH65
timezoneWET
utc_offset±0
timezone_DSTIST
utc_offset_DST+1

Athenry (; ) is a town in County Galway, Ireland, which lies 25 km east of Galway city. Some of the attractions of the medieval town are its town wall, Athenry Castle, its priory and its 13th-century street-plan. The town is also well known by virtue of the song "The Fields of Athenry". The town is in a townland, civil parish and barony of the same name.

History

St. Mary's Parish Church in Athenry.

|1821|1093 |1831|1319 |1841|1236 |1851|1487 |1861|1283 |1871|1194 |1881|1030 |1891|910 |1901|853 |1911|791 |1926|993 |1936|1048 |1946|1153 |1951|1181 |1956|1287 |1961|1266 |1966|1333 |1971|1240 |1981|1479 |1986|1642 |1991|1612 |1996|1614 |2002|2154 |2006|3205 |2011|3950 |2016|4445 |2022|4603 Athenry's name derives from the ford ('Áth') crossing the river Clarin just east of the settlement. It was originally called 'Áth na Ríogh' ('Ford of the Kings') because it was the home area of the Cenél nDéigill kings of Soghan, whose leading lineage were the Ó Mainnín. On some medieval maps of English origin the town is called Kingstown.

Originally, Soghan was surrounded by Uí Maine to the east, Aidhne to the south, and Maigh Seola to the west. However, after 1135, and by 1152, Tairrdelbach Ua Conchobair forcibly incorporated it into the newly created trícha cét of Clann Taidg, ruled by lords such as Fearghal Ó Taidg an Teaghlaigh, who expelled the Ó Mainnín family. In the 1230s the Ó Taidg an Teaghlaigh family were in turn displaced by Meyler de Bermingham.

The earliest remaining building in the town is Athenry Castle which was built sometime before 1240 by Meyler de Bermingham. In 1241, the Dominican Priory was founded, and became an important center for learning and teaching. It was ostensibly closed during the Protestant Reformation but survived until being desecrated and burned during the Mac an Iarla wars of the 1560s–80s, and was finally vandalised by Cromwellians in the 1650s. The medieval walls around Athenry are among the most complete and best preserved in Ireland, with 70% of the original circuit still standing, along with some of the original towers and the original North gate. The remains of the Lorro Gate were partially unearthed in 2007 during the redevelopment of road works in the area.

In the centre of the town is the 'square'; markets were held from the 17th century onwards and where the town's late 15th century 'Market Cross' is still located. The monument, which is of Tabernacle or Lantern type, is the only one of its kind in Ireland, and the only medieval cross in the country still standing in situ. A heritage centre now occupies the remains of the mid-13th century St Mary's Collegiate Church adjacent to the town Square. The original medieval church is largely destroyed, but in 1828 a Church of Ireland church was built into its chancel.

A late Bronze Age shield, found near Athenry, is now in the British Museum

In 1791, Jean Antoine Coquebert de Montbret visited the town, which he described as:

Moyode Castle is another tall 16th-century fortified tower house of the Dolphin family, which went to the Persse family. The castle is now restored and inhabited and is located 3.5 mi from the town of Athenry.

In 1863, a late Bronze Age shield was found in the vicinity of Athenry, and is now held in the British Museum's collection.

Economy and transport

Athenry Dominican Priory

Transport

By road, Athenry is served by the M6 motorway which links Galway city to Dublin. By rail, it is served by the Athenry railway station, which opened on 1 August 1851 and lies on the Galway–Dublin main line of the Irish rail network. The town is at the junction of the Galway–Dublin line, and the partially complete the Western Railway Corridor (Limerick–Sligo).

Industry

In December 2017, funding was announced for a "Food Innovation Hub" in Athenry, projected by its promoters to create 360 jobs within 3 years, and to cost in the region of €3.9m.

[[River Clarin

Sport

Athenry is home to the Gaelic Athletic Association St. Mary Club, which has won three All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship titles.

Athenry Athletics Club has a juvenile and a senior section. The club has produced two Olympic sprinters, Martina McCarthy and Paul Hession. McCarthy represented Ireland in the women's 4 × 400 metres relay at the 2000 Summer Olympics and Hession competed in the men's 200 metres at the 2008 Summer Olympics.

Athenry is also home to Athenry F.C., founded in 1971. The club reached the 2006 final of the FAI Junior Cup, and the following year it became the Galway & District League champions for the first time, repeating the same achievement during the 2007–08, 2009–10, and 2014–15 seasons. In 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011 and 2016, Athenry also won the Connacht Junior Cup title.

Athenry is also home of the Athenry Golf Club and Athenry Judo Club.

International relations

Twin towns – Sister cities

Athenry is twinned with the town of Quimperlé in Brittany (France) and, since 2013, Renews-Cappahayden, Newfoundland and Labrador (Canada).

People

The following is a list of notable natives of Athenry:

  • Slim Barrett (born in the 1960s) – award-winning jewellery designer and artist;
  • Anthony Richard Blake (1786–1849) – lawyer, administrator and 'backstairs Viceroy of Ireland';
  • Robert Blakeney (1679–1733) – Member of Parliament for Athenry;
  • Tomás Bobhdacing (fl. c. 1300) – founder of the Bodkin family;
  • James Patrick Broderick (1891–1973) – Jesuit and religious writer;
  • Noël Browne (1915–1997) – doctor and politician;
  • John de Burgh (1590–1667) – Archbishop of Tuam;
  • Micheál de Búrc (c.1800 – 6 July 1881) – poet;
  • Dominic Burke (c. 1603–1649) – Dominican priest and political agent;
  • Oliver Burke () – Bishop of Kilmacduagh;
  • Thomas Burke (c. 1747–1783) – governor of North Carolina;
  • William Burke (c. 1611–dead by 1685) – Dominican cleric and prior;
  • Conainne ( ) – Christian missionary;
  • Ciarán Cannon (born 1965) – Fine Gael Teachta Dála (TD) for the Galway East constituency;
  • Eugene Cloonan (born 1978) – hurler;
  • John Cummings (1828-after 1913) – piper;
  • Patrick D'Arcy (1598–1668) – writer of the constitution of Confederate Ireland;
  • Basilia de Bermingham (fl. c. 1250) – religious patron;
  • Meyler de Bermingham – founder of Athenry;
  • Rickard de Bermingham (died 1322) – lord of Athenry;
  • Liam Deois (fl. early 1800s) – highwayman;
  • Vincent Dillon (died 1651) – Dominican martyr;
  • Padraic Fallon (1905–1974) – poet and playwright;
  • Elaine Feeney (born 1979) – writer;
  • Julie Feeney (born 1979) – singer and composer;
  • Robert French (1716–1779) – MP and landlord;
  • Paul Hession (born 1983) – track and field athlete;
  • Kerrill (fl. c. 480) – Christian missionary;
  • Nannie Lambert Power O'Donoghue (1843–12 January 1940) – poet, journalist, equestrian;
  • Larry Lardner (fl. 1920) – IRA commander;
  • Mary Lavin (1912–1996) – writer and novelist;
  • Bryan Mahon (1862–1930) – general of the British Army and Senator of the Irish Free State;
  • Maél Póil (fl. c. 800s–900s) – medieval abbot of Templemoyle;
  • P. J. Molloy (born 1952) – hurler;
  • Marcas Ó Callanáin (1784–1836) – poet and balladier;
  • Tom O'Connor – local historian;
  • John O'Heyne (c. 1648–1713) – historian and Dominican;
  • Fearghal Ó Taidg an Teaghlaigh (died 1226) – marshal to the kings of Connacht;
  • Joe Rabbitte (born 1970) – hurler;
  • Frank Shawe-Taylor (1869–1920) – High Sheriff of County Galway, killed during the Irish War of Independence;
  • Brian Shawe-Taylor (1915–1999) – racing driver;

Note

References

References

  1. "Profile 1 – Population Distribution and Movement F1015 – Population: Athenry, Co. Galway". [[Central Statistics Office (Ireland)]].
  2. "Baile Átha an Rí/Athenry". [[Placenames Database of Ireland]].
  3. "Histpop — The Online Historical Population Reports Project".
  4. Lee, J. J.. (1981). "Irish population, economy, and society: Essays in honour of the late K.H. Connell". Clarendon Press.
  5. Mokyr, Joel. (1984). "New developments in Irish population history, 1700-1850". The Economic History Review.
  6. "The Mannion Clan".
  7. Rynne, Etienne. (1992). "Athenry: A Medieval Irish town". Athenry Historical Society.
  8. Thomas, Avril. (1992). "The walled towns of Ireland". Irish Academic Press.
  9. Ní Chinnéide, Síle. (1952). "Coquebert de Montbret's: Impressions of Galway City and County in the year 1791". Journal of the Galway Archaeological and Historical Society.
  10. "Museum number 1888,0719.1 – Shield". British Museum Collection.
  11. Siggins, Lorna. (11 December 2017). "Athenry gets €4.5m food innovation campus as Apple 'in limbo'".
  12. "St. Mary GAA Club Athenry official website".
  13. "Athenry AC Juvenile Contact Information".
  14. (December 2012). "Athenry AC (Senior) 10th Anniversary - some thoughts and numbers".
  15. (18 May 2009). "Martina Medals at AAI Games".
  16. (20 August 2007). "Good Luck Paul Hession".
  17. "Athenry FC History".
  18. "FAI Junior Cup 2006". [[Football Association of Ireland]].
  19. "Athenry Football Club Roll of Honor".
  20. "History of Athenry Golf Club".
  21. "Athenry Judo Club".
  22. (12 February 2007). "Jumelage Quimperlé-Athenry: Pâques en Irlande".
  23. (5 September 2013). "Athenry twinned with Newfoundland town". [[Galway Advertiser]].
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