Oughtmama
Oughtmama Ucht Máma | |
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Civil parish | |
Ruins of two small churches in Oughtmama, now almost concealed by hazel regrowth | |
Oughtmama Location in Ireland | |
Coordinates: 53°09′05″N 9°05′42″W / 53.151429°N 9.09497°WCoordinates: 53°09′05″N 9°05′42″W / 53.151429°N 9.09497°W | |
Country | Ireland |
Province | Munster |
County | County Clare |
Time zone | WET (UTC+0) |
• Summer (DST) | IST (WEST) (UTC-1) |
Irish Grid Reference | R330871 |
Oughtmama (Irish: Ucht Máma[1]) is a civil parish in County Clare. It lies in the Burren, a region in the northwest of the county.
Location
The parish is in the extreme north of the barony of Burren, and the county of Clare. The parish is 3.75 by 2.5 miles (6.04 by 4.02 km) and covers 9,843 acres (3,983 ha). The parish holds Lough Murree, a lake of 34 acres (14 ha). It has two headlands that extend into Galway Bay, Aughinish Point and Finavarra Point. The land is mostly low-lying, rising to Abbey Hill in the east at 795 feet (242 m) above sea level. It contains the villages of Aughinish and Finavarra. The population in 1841 was 2,075 in 325 houses.[2]
Antiquities
The name of the parish, Ucht mama, means "the breast of the high pass". The parish takes its name from the townland of Oughtmama in the east, and describes the situation of that townland on one of the hills that surround the Corcomroe valley.[3] There are three churches in this townland, two of them are well preserved, lying together in a straight line. The third is a ruin about 300 yards (270 m) away. Based on old records, the churches may be assumed to have been built to honor three saints, each named Colman. A small distance to the northeast of the churches is a holy well dedicated to St. Colman. There are records of a Franciscan abbey called Beagh, which must have stood in the townland of that name, but there are no traces of it, and no tradition.[3]
There are various cairns and cahers, mostly ruined, including a remarkable but unnamed cairn on the top of Knockycallanan hill.[3] The ruins of Turlough Castle lie on the border of a lough.[4] It is almost level with the ground, as is the castle of Finvarra. Both castles belonged to the O’Loghlen family.[3] The hereditary poets of the O’Loghlens in Finnavarra were the O’Daly family. They moved to Galway towards the end of the 15th century. One of their descendants was James Daly, 1st Baron Dunsandle and Clanconal.[3] In 1837 there were Martello towers on Aughinish Point and Finavarra Point.[4] Finavarra Tower, built around 1810, is still standing.[5]
Townlands
The townlands are Aghawinnaun, Aughinish, Behagh, Boloona, Coolnatullagh, Cragballyconoal, Deelin Beg, Deelin More, Finavarra Demesne, Gortaclare, Gortboyheen, Kilweelran, Knockycallanan, Newquay, Oughtmama, Poulaphuca, Rine, Scanlan's Island, Slievecarran and Turlough.[6]
Gallery
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Oughtmama and Bell Harbour
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Pasture alongside Corker Pass road, Oughtmama Townland
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Finavarra Martello Tower
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St Colman's Well
References
Citations
Sources
- "Finavarra Point Martello Tower, County Clare". Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht. Retrieved 2014-04-04.
- Frost, James (1897). "Burren, or Corcomroe East, Oughtmama Parish". The History and Topography of the County of Clare by James Frost. Retrieved 2014-04-04.
- Lewis, Samuel (1837). "Oughtmama". County Clare: A History and Topography. Retrieved 2014-04-04.
- "Map of Oughtmama Parish showing Townlands". Clare County Library. Retrieved 2014-04-04.
- "Oughtmama". Parliamentary Gazeteer of Ireland 1845. Retrieved 2014-04-04.
- "Ucht Máma". Placenames Database of Ireland. Retrieved 2014-04-10.
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