North Munster Antiquarian Journal vol. 52, 2012
81
Lettermoylan of Clann Bhruaideadha:
A résumé of their landholding,
topography & history
LUKE McINERNEY
This paper surveys the landholding of the learned poet-chronicler lineage,
Clann Bhruaideadha of west Co. Clare and touches on the relationship
between Clann Bhruaideadha and their estate at Lettermoylan on Slieve
Callan. As members of the Gaelic learned class Clann Bhruaideadha had
extensive landholding in Ibrickan and other parts of Co. Clare, including
church land, crannóg and towerhouse settlements.
Confusion appears to exist in Co. Clare as to the whereabouts of Lettermoylan.1
Lettermoylan, it may be observed, was one of the historical estates of the Meic
Bhruaideadha (viz. Clann Bhruaideadha2), a learned poet-chronicler lineage that was
among the literati service families whose chief patrons were the Uí Bhriain of Thomond.
Uncertainty over the location of Lettermoylan is compounded by the observation that its
location on the eastern slopes of Slieve Callan (Sliabh Calláin) afforded the area little
value in agricultural terms. It is deemed an unlikely residence for a high status family
of the Gaelic literary class. The land surrounding the slopes of Slieve Callan are
characterised as marginal and of low productive value, a fact easily deduced from a walk
around the boggy perimeter of its eastern and southern slopes.
This confusion arose from the misleading identification in John O’Donovan’s
edited version of the Annals of the Four Masters (1856).3 There it states Lettermoylan
lay in Dysert within a subdivision of ‘Glangee’. This identification was appended
as a note by O’Donovan accompanying the annalistic recording of the death in 1595
of Maccon Ó Cléirigh ollamh to Ó Domhnall in history, who died while visiting
‘Leitir-Maelain in Thomond’ (Leitir Maolain i tuadhmumhain).4 The error also found its
way into Fr. Edmund Hogan’s Onomasticon Goedelicum (1910).5 From this point
uncertainty has remained as to the actual location of Lettermoylan. It will be ascertained
in this article that Lettermoylan situated on the eastern flank of Slieve Callan in the
1 The author wishes to thank Martin Breen, Prof. Pádraig Ó Riain (UCC), Brian Ó Dálaigh, Dr Katharine Simms (TCD),
2
3
4
5
Kenneth Nicholls (UCC), Prof. Joep Leerssen (Universiteit van Amsterdam) and Jane Tottenham in the preparation of this
paper.
The correct literary form of the name is written thus. See Seathrún Céitinn, Foras Fearsa ar Éirinn, III (London, 1908)
pp12-14. Also see James Carney, ‘De Scriptoribus Hibernicis’, Celtica, vol. 1 (1946) pp 86-103:91 where it is written as
‘Clann Bhrúaideadha’. For literary or phonetic reasons the Meic Bhruaideadha used the form ‘McBrodyn’ in English and
‘Bruodinus’ in Latin sources. The exact reasons for this are unclear but the form appears to have been adopted by
successive members of the family in the seventeenth century.
See John O’Donovan (ed.), Annala Rioghachta Eirean/The Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters, From
the Earliest Period to the Year 1616, (second edition, Dublin, 1856).
Ibid., sub anno 1595.
See Fr. Edmund Hogan’s Onomasticon Goedelicum: locorum et tribuum Hiberniae et Scotiae: An index, with
identifications, to the Gaelic names of places and tribes (Dublin, 1910).
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LUKE McINERNEY
modern parish of Inagh (which once formed part of the Church of Ireland parish of
Dysert6) and that it encompassed an ancient church associated with Mac Reithe (i.e. Mac
Creiche).7 This church had an important bearing on the status of Lettermoylan and
provides one explanation of the link between Lettermoylan and Clann Bhruaideadha.
In 1912 antiquary Dr George U. Macnamara confirmed O’Donovan’s mistake and
added that ‘Glangee cannot be found in the townland list at all, but there is a Glennageer
in the adjoining parish of Inagh’.8 Glennageer does not appear in the 1641 Books of
Survey and Distribution, but Lettermoylan does feature in 1641 under the Church of
Ireland parish of Dysert.9 The modern Glennageer situates on the eastern slope of Slieve
Callan. It will be shown that Lettermoylan, while no longer designated a townland
division, once comprised modern day Glennageer, Knockalassa, Magherabaun and
Ballynoe where Mount Callan House now stands. Investigating the link between Clann
Bhruaideadha and Lettermoylan is the key to comprehending the landholding and status
of this learned lineage. This paper has twin purposes; to unravel the connection between
Lettermoylan and Clann Bhruaideadha, and to survey their landholding. The course taken
here demonstrates that their landholding in the seventeenth century is relevant to understanding their orgins as a family of the Gaelic learned class.
Clann Bhruaideadha Origins
It has been speculated that Clann Bhruaideadha shared genealogical links with the
Uí Dheaghaidh and that their remote ancestors held the kingship of Corcomroe.10 We
read in the annals that a Bruaided succeeded to the kingship in 871,11 and he is sometimes
identified as a progeniture of the lineage.12 By the eleventh-century the descendents of
Bruaided seemed to have been displaced from Corcomroe and instead held the lordship
of Ráith Tamhnaighe.13 This can tentatively be identified as Toonagh in Dysart parish,14
from whence may derive the townland Ballybrody, possibly representing the rump
survival of Clann Bhruaideadha’s ancient patrimony. If this was the case, it needs to
be reconciled to the fact that Clann Bhruaideadha’s claim to the ollamh-ship of seanchas
Uí Bhriain was achieved only in the sixteenth century.15 Prior to this date Clann
Bhruaideadha’s activity in the learned professions of chronicling and poetry must have
enjoyed a more circumspect regional character, commensurate with their status as a local
lineage with local sources of patronage.
Genealogist John O’Hart identified several Meic Bhruaideadha obits for the years
1427 and 1518 which refer to kinsmen with the appellations ‘chief professor of poetry
6 Edward Worth, Bishop of Killaloe (1660-1669,) groups Lettermoylan as part of the termon of Dysert. See MS 1777,
‘Typescript copy of a survey of lands in the diocese of Killaloe made for Bishop Worth, 1661’, transcribed by (Rev) James
B. Leslie, National Library of Ireland, 1936, pp 31-3. Also see R. Simington (ed.), Books of Survey and Distribution, Vol.
4, Clare (Dublin, 1967) p. 533 where it is recorded as a denomination in the parish of Dysert.
7 Mac Creiche is the form of the name used throughout this paper.
8 See Dr. George U. Macnamara, ‘The O’Davorens of Cahermacnaughten, Burren, Co. Clare’, Journal of the North
Munster Archaeological Society, vol . 2 (1912-13) pp 63-212 and no. 4, vol. 2 (1913) pp 194-211.
9 Simington, Books of Survey and Distribution, Clare, p. 533.
10 Friar Bruodinus sets out the genealogical links of Clann Bhruaideadha to the Uí Dheaghaidh and their shared descent from
the brother of Bloid (a quo Uí Bhloid) Óengus. Antonius Bruodinus, Propugnaculum Catholicae Veritatis Libris X
Constructum, in Duasque Partes Divisum, Pars Prima Historica in Quinque Libros, (Prague, 1669) pp 771, 851.
11 See Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 871, 899 on his father Flaithbheartach and his own obit.
12 Diarmuid Ó Murchadha, ‘The Origins of Clann Bhruaideadha’, Éigse, vol. 31 (1999) pp 121-130:122.
13 Ibid., pp 123-4. Also see Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1069.
14 Ó Murchadha, ‘Origins of Clann Bhruaideadha’, p. 124.
15 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1563.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
83
and history’ and ‘chief historian and bard’ to the ‘O’Quinn of Cineal-Fearm[h]aic’.16
Whether there is any basis to these claims is uncertain because the supporting annalistic
entry or corresponding genealogy has not been located. But as these obits make clear, it
is more credible that prior to the mid-sixteenth century when learned Meic Bhruaideadha
appear in the annals,17 members of Clann Bhruaideadha were probably attached to local
ruling families such as the Uí Chuinn. While Clann Bhruaideadha must have been active
as a learned family from the mid-fourteenth century when Seaán Buidhe Mac Bruaideadha composed a poem for Mathghamhain Ó Briain in c.1365-69,18 their emergence
as the chief poet-chronicler lineage in the sixteenth century owed much to their links with
the fourth Earl of Thomond as they graduated from being ollaimh to the Uí Chuinn of
Inchiquin.
In discussing the origins of Clann Bhruaideadh which Friar Antonius Bruodinus
traces to the Dál gCais ancestor-founder and links them to both the Uí Dheaghaidh and
the Uí Bhriain, he also says something about the exemptions from tribute and military
quartering enjoyed by Clann Bhruaideadha and that they received an income from their
patrons.19
Denique notandum est, quo in honore inter Hiberniae Principes semper fuere
Chronologi illi, qui diligenter, syncere, & veridice acta Regum, & praecipuarum,
Familiarum, earumque Genealogias, observabant. Nam praeterquam quod ipsi
antiquissimae erant nobilitatis, ex eodem ordinarie stipite originem trahentes, ex
quo ij quorum erant Chronologi descenderunt (Bruodini v. g. qui OBrienoram
semper fuere Chronologi, originem trahunt, non solum ab Eibero Mileri primogenito, sed etiam a Cassio,a quo OBrien descenderunt; Bruodiga namque a quo
Bruodini dicuntur, filius fuit Deaghi, filij Aenea capitosi, filij Cassis, ex cujus
primogenito Bloid dicto, descendunt O’Brien, ut inferius fusius ostendam) sed
& emptione plus, quam Ecclesiastica gaudebant. A Principibus enim annuam
recipiebant pensionem. In publicis sessionibus, non infimas post Principes sedes
occupabant. Tam pacis, quam belli tempore, a Contributionibus, militumque
Quartirijs exempti erant. His, aliisque privilegijs gaudebant, eo sine, ut diligenter
suo insisterent muneri, postpositoque omni respectu, nitidam describerent
veritatem.20
[Finally it should be noted in what honour those chronologists, who diligently,
sincerely and truthfully kept the deeds of kings and of the most important families,
and the genealogies of the latter, have always been held among the princes of
Ireland. For aside from the fact that they themselves were from very ancient
nobility, drawing their origin regularly from the same root of which those descen16 John O’Hart, Irish Pedigrees: Or, the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation, (fifth edition, vol. 1, Dublin, 1892) p. 105.
17 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1563.
18 On Seaán Buidhe Mac Bruaideadha’s poem Dlighidh ollamh urraim ríogh (‘An ollamh should be respected by his
prince’) see Láimhbheartach Mac Cionnaith (ed), ‘Dlighidh ollamh urraim ríogh’, in Dioghluim Dána (Baile Átha Cliath,
1938) pp 252–6. Also see a full translation of the poem in L. McKenna, S.J. ‘Poem to Ó Briain’, The Irish Monthly,
vol. 49 (1921) pp 112-17. It appears that Mac Bruaideadha had caused verbal injury to his patron Mathghamhain
‘Maonmhaighe’ son of Muircheartach Ó Briain’ and his poem was offered in the spirit of reconciliation and an eye for the
continuance of Ó Briain’s patronage.
19 In Bruodinus’ work he notes that bards and other learned orders in Ireland traditionally received immunities or privileges
for rendering services to ruling dynasties. See Cornel O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, (Prague,
1671) p. 147.
20 Bruodinus, Propugnaculum Catholicae Veritatis, p. 771.
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LUKE McINERNEY
ded whose chronologists they were (the Bruodini, for example, who have always
been the chroniclers of the O’Briens, draw their origin not only from Eiberus, the
first son of Milerus, but also from Cas, from whom the O’Briens descended; for
Bruodiga, after whom the Bruodini are named, was the son of Deagh, the son of
Aeneas capitosus, the son of Cas, of whose first-born, who was called Bloid, the
O’Briens descend, as I will show at greater length further below), but they also
enjoyed greater exemption than that of the Church. For they used to receive an
annual pension from the princes. In public sessions, they did not occupy the
lowliest seats after the princes. Both in times of peace and in war, they were
exempt from contributions and from the duty of providing quarter. These and other
privileges they enjoyed, to this end, to be sure, that they would pursue their duty
diligently and, with a disregard for every (other) interest, they would write down
the clear truth.]21
The elite literate class possessed a degree of wealth and privilege which included
immunity from rent and tribute.22 In the case of the Meic Bhruaideadha chronicler-poets
the immunity which their family enjoyed was that of their chief residence at Knockanalban, to the south of Slieve Callan. It may be significant that the Clann Bhruaideadha
residence at Knockanalban was a crannóg, a fortified settlement that resonated an
ancient, if somewhat arcane, tradition of settlement. We know from the fourteenthcentury saga-text Caithréim Thoirdhealbhaigh that the masters of learning, the ollaimh,
had as their residence the ráth (‘agus gach ollam ina ráith’)23 while other members of the
learned orders such as the ‘noble coarbs’ were described as dwelling in their ‘high
church’ (‘agus gach uasalchomarba ina áirdchill’).24 The continued importance of the
ráith as a secular residence beyond the medieval period is attested in the Uí Dhuibhdábhoireann occupation of Cahermacnaughten in the seventeenth century.25 The Meic
Bhruaideadha also held a more conventional late medieval Gaelic residence, a towerhouse at the imposing vantage point of Doonogan.26
In respect to the foregoing it can equally be posited that Clann Bhruaideadha shared
an early connection to a monastic site after being ousted from the kingship of Corcomroe.
What may be gathered from these fragmented facts is agreeable with the general view
that Clann Bhruaideadha shared, along with other native literati, a peculiar connection to
the monastic church.27 Such a link probably evolved out of the monastic scriptoria of the
21 Author’s translation.
22 Immunities from tribute and military service can be identified for the brehon Meic Fhlannchadha lineage of Tuath Ghlae
(Killilagh) in Corcomore. See James Hardiman (ed.), ‘Ancient Irish Deeds and Writings Chiefly relating to Landed
Property from the Twelfth to Seventeenth Century: With Translation, Notes and a Preliminary Essay’, in Proceedings of
the Royal Irish Academy, vol. xv (1826) pp 1–95, pp 36-43. The specific reference reads, ‘A ta na sairsi ac Sil
Flannc[h]ad[h]a’ (‘immunities of the race of Flanchy’).
23 Sean Mac Ruaidhrí Mheic Craith, Caithréim Thoirdhealbhaigh, (ed.), Standish Hayes O’Grady (First edition, London,
1929) p. 134.
24 Ibid.
25 Macnamara, ‘The O’Davorens of Cahermacnaughten’, (1912-13) pp 63-93. On the chronology of occupation of such
residences into early modern times see Elizabeth Fitzpatrick, ‘Native Enclosed Settlement and the Problem of the Irish
‘Ring-fort’, Medieval Archaeology, vol. 53 (2009) pp 271-307.
26 Petworth House Archives, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
27 The early ecclesiastical origin of the Gaelic learned orders has received considerable attention by historians. See, for
example, Proinsias Mac Cana, ‘The Rise of the later school of Filidheacht’, Ériu, vol. xxv (1974) pp 126-46. For a similar
view but relating to Gaelic Scotland see Derick S. Thomson, ‘Gaelic Learned Orders and Literati in Medieval Scotland’,
Scottish Studies, vol. 12, part 1 (1968) pp 57-78.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
85
Irish Church and became the preserve of a caste of specialist families who transmitted
native learning inherited from the monastic scribes of the twelfth century and earlier. The
setting up of learned families on termon lands, along with reconstituting important
clerical tenants as airchinnigh (erenaghs), sometimes occurred after the reorganisation of
the Irish Church in the twelfth century.28 The process of reconstituting themselves as a
learned family and being granted stewardship over certain church lands – perhaps those
sites associated with the Corcomroe saint Mac Creiche – had the advantage of allowing
Clann Bhruaideadha to maintain their position, though at the expense of relinquishing
political influence to the Uí Dheaghaidh. There are other examples of formerly important
lineages being diminished in political terms and adopting ecclesiastical status to ensure
their survival. In Co. Clare the best example of this process were the Uí Ghráda of
Tuamgraney.29
We may also deduce a possible connection between the religious epithet of Maoilín
(i.e. small tonsured man) and Clann Bhruaideadha. It is known that learned families often
attempted to give themselves a pseudo-ecclesiastical legitimacy by adopting religious
epithets.30 This is evidenced from the Uí Dhuibhdábhoireann brehons of Corcomroe who
retained forenames such as Giolla na Naomh (i.e. devotee of saints) over generations.31 It
may be significant that the forename Maoilín was used over a long period by Clann
Bhruaideadha. A now lost pedigree showed a ‘Dermot son of Maoilín, professor of poetry
and history to the O’Quinns of Cineal-Fearm[h]aic 1427’, and the forename Maoilín
carried on over subsequent generations in this line.32 Other religious forenames can be
noted such as Giolla Brighde of Lettermoylan who became ollamh in 1582,33 and we may
also submit the eleventh century Giolla Molua Ua Bruaideadha34 of Ráith Tamhnaighe
(Toonagh?) in Dysert parish, ostensibly an early medieval ancestor-founder and bearer of
another pseudo-devotional forename.35
Mac Creiche & Clann Bhruaideadha
A survey of the evidence on Clann Bhruaideadha suggests a connection of some antiquity
with the cult of the Corcomroe saint, Mac Creiche. On the lands of Lettermoylan, near
the present day Mount Callan House, exists the remains of a small medieval church
or oratory situated next to a flowing stream. The site is known locally as ‘church field’36
and was used into modern times as a children’s burial place, though it is now wooded.
The dimensions of the structure suggest an early medieval church, akin to proprietary
28 This process has been observed in Fermanagh where some erenagh families acquired termon lands either through a grant
or in piecemeal fashion over the medieval period. See Ciarán Ó Scea, ‘Erenachs, erenachships and church landholding in
Gaelic Fermanagh, 1270-1609’, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, vol. 112, C (2011) pp 271-300.
29 Aoife Nic Ghiollamhaith, ‘Kings and Vassals in Later Medieval Ireland: The Uí Bhriain and the MicConmara in the
Fourteenth Century’, in Terry Barry, Robin Frame & Katharine Simms (eds), Colony and Frontier in Medieval Ireland
(London, 1995) pp 201-16:202.
30 Ó Scea, ‘Erenachs, erenachships and church landholding in Gaelic Fermanagh’, p. 297.
31 See, for example, the obit of Giolla na Naomh Ó Duibhdábhoireann, a law ollamh, in 1364. Annals of the Four Masters,
sub anno 1364. Also see the Giolla na Naomh Óg Ó Duibhdábhoireann who featured in a 1606 deed that divided the estate
among several brothers in the manner of ‘gavelkind’ inheritance, including the stone ring-fort residence of the family at
Cahermacnaughten in the Burren. See Macnamara, ‘The O’Davorens of Cahermacnaughten’, (1912-13) pp 89-93.
32 O’Hart, Irish Pedigrees, p. 105.
33 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1582.
34 See his obit in Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1069.
35 Ó Murchadha, ‘Origins of Clann Bhruaideadha’, p. 123.
36 The site was pointed out to the author by locals in October 2011 as such.
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LUKE McINERNEY
churches that served as a religious establishment for local kin-groups.37 Westropp
provides a description of the site which remains apt today:
On a spur beside a stream, above Mount Callan House; an oblong foundation
(about 31 feet by 15 feet inside, the walls 2 feet 8 inches thick) of small flagstone
masonry, the wall rarely over a foot high and the whole sheeted with wild
hyacinth.38
A careful reading of the Life of Mac Creiche reveals that the church at Lettermoylan has
ancient origins. In the medieval Life of Mac Creiche it states that he went into the
hermitage located between ‘Formáoil’ and the river ‘Eidhneach’ which was called
‘Clúain hÍ’.39 The Eidhneach (Inagh) river flows through modern day Ballynoe (i.e.
Lettermoylan) which situates west of Formaoil (Formoyle).40 From the context it is
apparent that Mac Creiche had his hermitage in this district which was described in his
Life as a small stone structure.41 The ruined foundations of the church near Mount Callan
House in Ballynoe are plausibly the survival of the original hermitage. Other sites situated nearby are reputed to have links to Mac Creiche. To the southwest of Slieve Callan are
the townlands Shanavogh East and West which may be the wooded place of Cell
Senbotha that was granted to Mac Creiche to build a church.42 It is unlikely to be a coincidence that Lettermoylan was held by the Meic Bhruaideadha who, in turn, paid a rent
to the Bishop of Killaloe in right of it constituting part of termon Dysert. While caution
needs to be exercised in the absence of corroborating evidence, circumstantial evidence
links Clann Bhruaideadha to early saintly veneration sites in west Co. Clare.
Clann Bhruaideadha’s link to Mac Creiche veneration sites may represent the vestige
of a historical connection to the native monastic church, perhaps even suggestive of the
lineage’s origins. It is possible that such a link may have been forged by association
during the post-Reform medieval period. In a supplication to Rome dated 1419 cleric
‘Thady Ybrodyga’ petitioned for the rectory of ‘Drunkrythe’ (Droim Críche, Drumcreehy).43 This was Tadhg Ó Bruaideadha44 who was probably a kinsman of the Meic
Bhruaideadha of Ibrickan. Drumcreehy rectory was a prebend of the treasurership of
37 Inspection of the site by the author in July 2012 identified possible remains of an enclosure around the site and the
presence of a south facing entrance.
38 Thomas J. Westropp, ‘Notes on certain primitive remains (forts and dolmens) in Inagh and Killeimer, Co. Clare’, Journal
of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, vol. xlvi, part ii (1916) pp 97-120:103. Averil Swinfen notes that ‘during the
last century this church bore the startling, though not altogether surprising, name of Temple-ee-coffin (church of the
Graves), for while there is no conspicuous graveyard in sight it is confirmed locally that there was a burial place nearby’.
Averil Swinfen, Forgotten Stones: Ancient Church Sites of the Burren and Environs (Dublin, 1992) p. 126.
39 Charles Plummer, Miscellanea Hagiographica Hibernica (First edition, Brussels, 1925) p. 13 [Betha Meic Creiche].
40 Ibid. Also see Westropp, ‘Notes on certain primitive remains (forts and dolmens) in Inagh and Killeimer, Co. Clare’,
p. 103. Mac Creiche is also said to have founded two other churches in the vicinity of Inagh: Teampull na glas Aighne and
Cell Senbotha. Also see Thomas J. Westropp, ‘Ancient Remains Near Lehinch, Co. Clare’ Journal of the Limerick Field
Club, iii (1905-08) pp 193-212.
41 Plummer, Miscellanea Hagiographica Hibernica, p. 53 [Betha Meic Creiche].
42 Ibid., pp 54-5. For an alternative view that places Mac Creiche’s Cell Senbotha as Kilshanny to the north, see Pádraig
Ó Riain, Diarmuid Ó Murchadha & Kevin Murray, Historical Dictionary of Gaelic Placenames, Foclóir Stairiúil Áitainmneacha Na Gaeilge, Fascicle 4 (London, 2011) pp 49-50.
43 ASV Registum Supplicationum,129f. 18v. This is also excerpted and published in Special List 43 available at the National
Library of Ireland Manuscripts Reading Room. This is the only reference to a Mac Bruaideadha in Papal correspondence
for the fifteenth century.
44 Both the Ó and Mac patronymic were interchangeably used by contemporaries. Such interchangeability regarding the
name is encountered in the seventeenth century Latin writings of Friar Antonius Bruodinus.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
87
Kilfenora and a townland in the parish is known as ‘Bishopsquarter’.45 Prebends were
benefices whose revenue from lands was often held by hereditary clergy or erenagh
families. It is likely that Drumcreehy rectory was associated with the coarbship of Mac
Creiche.46 If this was the case then Thady Ybrodyga held the coarbship of Mac Creiche in
1419, a position that may have been related to Clann Bhruaideadha’s association with
Mac Creiche sites such as Lettermoylan in Ibrickan. The fact that a kinsman of Clann
Bhruaideadha is found in northern Corcomroe at Drumcreehy is rather conspicuous and
suggestive that the coarbship was a titular title attached to the rectorship and not dominated by a hereditary coarb of local provenance.
Clann Bhruaideadha also held land in places associated with Mac Creiche; we find a
pardon issued to ‘Miellien oge McBrodie of the Synnganagh’ in the parish of Kilmacreehy near Liscannor in 1585.47 This is almost certainly Maoilín Óg Mac Bruaideadha
who at his death in 1602 was recognized as ollamh.48 Clann Bhruaideadha’s interest in
the cult of Mac Creiche may have extended beyond west Co. Clare. A branch of Clann
Bhruaideadha was settled on Moynoe termon near the monastic site of Inishcaltra, which
was connected with Mac Creiche in his later life.49 From these gleanings we may deduce
a link, perhaps one forged by early association, between Mac Creiche foundations and
Clann Bhruaideadha. The form and nature of that asssociation is uncertain but it is
reasonable to suggest that as a learned family Clann Bhruaideadha may once have
graduated from an early medieval monastery.
Lettermoylan & Clann Bhruaideadha: c.1200-c.1650
Lettermoylan (Leitir Maoláin, ‘damp hill-side of Maoláin’) would be rather obscure to
history in the absence of its late medieval association with Clann Bhruaideadha. We are
fortunate that several early references to Lettermoylan survive and in many cases owe
their survival to the penmanship of a Mac Bruaideadha. Slieve Callan is known to history
by the presence of the celebrated Ogham stone50 found at its southern flank in the
townland of Knockalassa. Local school master and poet John Lloyd publicized the
Ogham stone in his An Impartial Tour in Clare in 1778,51 and its apparent inscription
dedicated to Conán, a member of a band of warriors slain on the slopes of Callan in remote times. On visiting Slieve Callan in 1785 Theophilus O’Flanagan wrote on arriving
at Knockalassa:
45 Rev. Philip Dwyer, The Diocese of Killaloe from the Reformation to the Eighteenth Century (Dublin, 1878) p. 98.
46 The colophon of the Life of Mac Creiche (Beatha Meic Creiche) states that it was copied by Friar Micheál Ó Cléirigh in
the convent of the friars of Donegal on 11 May, 1635 from the copy which he wrote at Ennis Friary in June 1634 from a
book which Maoilechlainn Ó Callannáin wrote at Cell Maoilodhrain for the coarb of Mac Creiche in 1524. This has been
interpreted by some to be Killoran in Castletownarra in Co. Tipperary. Rather, Cell Maoilodhrain was ‘Kilmoylan alias
Kilmulran’ recorded in 1641 in Abbey parish consisting of abbey land under the proprietorship of ‘Karwall O Kallinan’
and other Uí Challannáin kinsmen. Drumcreehy situates nearby so it is likely that the coarb of Mac Creiche for whom
Beatha Meic Creiche was written was located at Drumcreehy church. The fact that episcopal land of the See of Kilfenora
situated at Drumcreehy, represented in the townland there called Bishopsquarter, strengthens the case that a coarbship was
based at Drumcreehy. Simington, Books of Survey and Distribution, p. 443; Plummer, Miscellanea Hagiographica
Hibernica, [Beatha Meic Creiche].
47 See The Irish Fiants of the Tudor Sovereigns During the Reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Philip & Mary, and Elizabeth
I, Fiant, Eliz., No. 4753 [year 1585].
48 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1602.
49 Pádraig Ó Riain, A Dictionary of Irish Saints (Dublin, 2011) p. 422.
50 The Ogham stone was known as Leac-Conain into the late nineteenth century, a fact recalled by locals living on Slieve
Callan. Sir Samuel Ferguson, ‘On the Alleged Literary Forgery Respecting Sun-worship on Mount-Callan, Proceedings of
the Royal Irish Academy, vol. 1 (1879) pp 315-322:322.
51 John Lloyd, A Short Tour; or, an Impartial and Accurate Description of the County of Clare with Some Particular and
Historical Observations (Ennis, 1780).
88
LUKE McINERNEY
…about a mile north east from the high road leading from Ennis to Ibrickan, I
perceived (as I thought) a square rock, which bore the awful appearance of a
monument, on the Leitirmoylan (that is the south east) side of the mountain.52
The publicity gathered by Lloyd’s publication provoked academic discussion for over a
century. Slieve Callan is also known for the Knockalassa wedge tomb, a visible reminder
of megalithic occupation of the site. Máire MacNeill, writing on the survival into modern
times of vestiges of the ancient festival of Lughnasa, describes the topography and
environs of Slieve Callan:
In the south-west of the county there are a few low ridges of higher ground and
one considerable hill, Slieve Callan, which rises to 1,282 feet, seven miles in from
the sea. Its situation is a commanding one, giving it wide prospects all around,
framed by the hills of the Burren, Aughty, Slieve Bernagh, the Shannon estuary
and the sea. Its immediate neighborhood is rough and boggy for the most part—
bréan-tír, the sour land, lies north from it—but only seven miles to the east is the
more fertile tract in which Ennis stands.53
Slieve Callan (Sliabh Calláin) enters into pseudo-history in medieval manuscripts such
as the Battle of Gabhra which features the warrior-hero Conán54 and embellished in
Micheál Coimín’s 1748 work of fiction Eachtra Chloinne Thoirdhealbhaigh mhic Stairn
(‘Legend of Children of Turlough son of Starn’).55 Slieve Callan is recalled in the poem
Duanaire Finn which talks of a Fuath Sleibhe Colláin56 (phantom of Slieve Callan), and
it is also found in the medieval text, Beatha Sheanáin, where the monster (Cathach) of
Inis Cathaigh is said to have been banished to Dubhloch (Doolough lake) near Slieve
Callan by Seanán himself.57 According to the lore of placenames, or Dinnsheanchas,
Slieve Callan was once known as ‘Sliabh Leitreach’58 and the antiquary T.J Westropp
suggested this name survived on Slieve Callan in the form of Leitir Maoláin.59 Slieve
Callan also occurs in the fifteenth century topographical tract by Ó hUidhrín where it is
written as Collán and regarded a marker of the territory of the Dál gCais.60
The annals do not furnish us with knowledge as to the history of settlement at the site.
However, ‘Sliabh Cailge’ where the Mairtínigh of the Corca Bhaiscinn battled King Óen52 Theophilus O’Flanagan ‘On the Ogham Inscription stated to have been discovered some years since on the Mountain of
Callan in the county of Clare’, The Dublin Philosophical Journal, and Scientific Review (May 1826) pp 134-44:135.
53 Máire MacNeill, The Festival of Lughnasa (London, 1962) p. 193.
54 Also see O’Flanagan, ‘Ogham Inscription…Callan’, pp 134-49; and Siobhan de hÓir, ‘The Mount Callan Ogham Stone
and its Context’, North Munster Antiquarian Journal, vol. 25 (1983) pp 43-57.
55 Pádraig Ó Briain, (ed.), ‘Eachtra Thoidhealbhaigh mhic Stairn maille me Eachtraibh a Thriúir Mhac le Michéal
Ó Coimín’, Blíthfhleasg de Mhilseánaibh na Gaeilge (Baile Átha Cliath, 1893). It is mentioned in this work that on Slieve
Callan at a place called Poul Gorm Liath lived a great boar on the north side of the mountain. See William Hackett, ‘Folklore – No1: Porcine Legends’, Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, vol. 2 (1853) pp 303-10:304.
56 MacNeill, Festival of Lughnasa’ p. 200.
57 Ibid. Doolough is described in the text as ‘Nigricantis aquae juxta montem Callain in Tuamonia’. See John Colgan, Acta
Sanctorum Hiberniae (Dublin, 1948) under March 8th, Section xxxviii.
58 The reference reads: ‘Is ann con[a]clai[d] Alestar a raith for Sleib Collan .i. Sliab Leitrech indiu: is de asberar raith
Cluana Alestair’. [‘Then Alestar dug his rath on Sliab Collan now Sliab Leittrech. Hence it is called the rath of Cluain
Alestair’]. Whitley Stokes, ‘The Prose Tales in the Rennes Dindshenchas’, Revue Celtique, vol. 15 (1894) pp 272336:317.
59 T.J. Westropp, ‘Notes on certain primitive remains (forts and dolmens) in Inagh and Killeimer, Co. Clare’, p. 104.
60 John O’Donovan (ed.), The Topographical Poems of John O’Dubhagain and Giolla Na Naomh O’Huidhrin (Dublin,
1862) p. 123.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
89
gus Olmucaidh in the pseudo-mythical past (3790 BC), is thought to be Slieve Callan.61
The popular festival of Lughnasa was held at Knockalassa until it was suppressed in the
mid-nineteenth century and replaced by Garland Sunday.62 From this it may be gathered
that Slieve Callan and surrounds constituted a ritual landscape. Such landscapes were
associated with the estates of the Gaelic learned class who were attuned to the significance of veneration sites which helped legitimise their landholding and status.
References in Bardic Poetry
Lettermoylan enters the historical record in a late sixteenth century poem. The form and
rhyme of the poem is of the classical Dán Díreach style, an accomplished metre
composed by poet-scholars. The poem was doubtlessly the work of a Mac Bruaideadha
and given its context it can be placed in the 1580s. This makes it plausibly the composition of Giolla Brighde Mhic Bhruaideadha (d.1599)63 who succeeded his kinsman
Maoilín as ollamh seanchais in Thomond in 1582,64 or Maoilín Óg Mhic Bhruaideadha
(d.1602) who succeeded as ollamh around 1588.65 Maoilín Óg’s literary activities were
considerable, and he assisted in making a translation of the New Testament into Irish
when he was based in Dublin in 1602.66 The most likely author of the poem, however,
was Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha who appears never to have been recognised as
ollamh but instead cultivated a personal relationship with his patron Donough O’Brien,
fourth Earl of Thomond.67
In practice there may have been overlap between when the title ollamh transferred
from Giolla Brighde to Maoilín Óg.68 Giolla Brighde was still living at Lettermoylan in
1591.69 This piece of information is evidence that Lettermoylan remained the chief
residence of the Mac Bruaideadha ollamh in the late sixteenth century. The attribution of
the poem is likely Tadhg mac Dáire, owing to a later identification of the poem by Friar
Antonius Bruodinus, grand-nephew of Tadhg mac Dáire. The poem was addressed to
Uilleog and Seaán, sons of the Earl of Clanrickard (d.1582).70
61 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 3790BC. Also see Westropp, ‘Notes on certain primitive remains (forts and
dolmens) in Inagh and Killeimer, Co. Clare’, p. 104.
62 MacNeill, Festival of Lughnasa, pp 197-9.
63 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1599.
64 Ibid., sub anno 1582. He witnessed a covenant that was written before 1571. Hardiman (ed.), ‘Ancient Irish Deeds’, p. 67.
65 Maoilín Óg Mac Bruaideadha was regarded as the representative of Clann Bhruaideadha from 1599 when he composed a
poetic quatrain to Aodh Ruadh Ó Domhnaill on the return of his cattle to him that were rustled by Ó Domhnaill’s troops.
But his claim to the ollamh-ship may be traced back to 1585 when he signed as a witness to the Composition of Connacht.
Certainly from around 1588 he is credited with writing a pedigree for Clann an Oirchinnigh. See Annals of the Four
Masters, sub anno 1599. Also see RIA MS 23.H.22, p. 11.
66 Richard F. Cronnelly, Irish Family History, Part III (Dublin, 1864) p. 330 and Joep Leerssen (ed.), Mere Irish and FiorGhael (Cork, 1996) p. 327. On Maoilín Óg in Dublin in c.1600 and that he was enlisted in the translation of the New
Testament while visiting Dublin in the retinue of the Earl of Thomond see T.W. Moody, F.X. Martin & F.J. Byrne (eds), A
New History of Ireland: Early Modern Ireland 1534-1691, Vol.3, (reprint, Oxford, 2009) p. 512. On Maoilín Óg’s
activities in Dublin he was described as ‘duine iúlmhar sa teanguidh Ghaoidheilge, sa gColáisde nuadh láimh ré Baile
atha Cliath’ [‘A person wise in the Irish language, in the new college close to Dublin’]. Cuthbert McGrath, ‘Materials for
a History of Clann Bhruaideadha’, Éigse, vol. iv, part 4 (1943-4) pp 48-66:61 [cf. note 17].
67 See his poem Eascar Gaoidheal éag aoinfhir in Brian Ó Cuív, ‘An elegy on Donnchadh Ó Briain, fourth earl of
Thomond’, Celtica, vol. 16 (1984) pp 87–105.
68 Maoilín Óg is described by Bruodinus as ‘in Elogijs Obrienorum’ (Eulogist of O’Brien). See Bruodinus, Propugnaculum
Catholicae Veritatis, p. 974.
69 ‘Pardon to Gilabride Mc Brodyne, of Letter Mellane’. See The Irish Fiants of the Tudor Sovereigns During the Reigns of
Henry VIII, Edward VI, Philip & Mary, and Elizabeth I (Dublin, 1994) Fiant, Eliz., No.5686 [year 1591].
70 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1582.
90
LUKE McINERNEY
The poem conjecturally envisages Ireland being divided between the poet and his
patrons, the Clanrickard Bourkes. Relating to Lettermoylan are several verses of
topographical interest:
Do ním leath do Leitir Maoláin
Nach mín muighe
Tír ar a gceiltear néall nimhe
Fán tréan tuile
Tír e Leaghan sneachta ag snighe
Dearca duine
Do ním leath mar éin-eing oile
d’ Éirinn uile
[one half I count from / rough-fielded Leitir Maoláin / where sky is overcast / and
torrent heavy, / and where falling snow / blinds men’s eyes; / all the rest of Éire / I
count as the other half]71
The poem continues with references to Slieve Callan, leaving us in little doubt that the
Meic Bhruaideadha chronicler-poets72 had their estate at Leitir Maoláin on Slieve Callan.
Characteristically, the poet underplays the value of his land,73 while employing hyperbolic language to describe the virtues of the territory that he wished to assign his patron
through his poetical partition of Ireland:
Óthá Éighneach go hucht gColláin
Mar chuid tíre
Beag nach bhfuilid i gcló a chéile
[umun] mó míle
Níor ghab duine iadh budh fhuaire
Riamh is ríghe
[from Éighneach [Inagh] / to Collán’s slope / lands with most game[?]
/are mostly alike / no one ever got poorer / land and realm as share]74
In this stanza Mac Bruaideadha is indicating that his patrimony included the land
between Éighneach (river Inagh) and Slieve Callan. This sweep of territory includes the
townlands Formoyle Eighteragh and Formoyle Oughteragh which are located on the
eastern slopes of Slieve Callan and adjacent to Lettermoylan. These lands were under
Clann Bhruaideadha proprietorship in 1641.75
Other references abound in the poem, including an allusion which imagines the poet
standing on a ‘stream-wasted’ mountain. The context implies that the mountain in question is that of ‘rough-fielded Leitir Maoláin’ referred to earlier in the poem and where the
form Leitir, (damp, wet hill-side) creates a typonomyic association with the poet’s metaphorical territory:
71 McKenna, ‘A Partition of Ireland’, (January-June), p. 331.
72 According to the late-eleventh-century Book of Rights no poet is entitled to reward who is not also a learned historian.
Katharine Simms, ‘Literacy and the Irish Bards’, in Literacy in Medieval Celtic Societies, (ed.), Huw Pryce (Cambridge,
1998) pp 238-258:247.
73 Elsewhere in the poem Mac Bruaideadha refers to his land as, ‘is léigid damh-sa an eang (an shaidhbhir) [eassádhail]
anshochair iomchumhang úd’, [‘and they leave to me the poor, unattractive, miserable, narrow district I spoke of’].
74 McKenna, ‘A Partition of Ireland’, (January-June), p. 331.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
91
Is gidh tromdha tathaoireach tarchuisneach atáim-se ar an dtulán sruithmheirgeach sléibhe so, ní mó ná meanma is mór-aigneadh cloinne [ionnsaighthighe]
éicht-bheodha oirdhearca (urramhanta) an Iarla.
[however rough, insulting and vituperative I am, standing on this stream-wasted(?)
mountain-height, not greater is the spirit and pride of the impetuous, vigorous,
famous, respected race of the Earl].76
Mac Bruaideadha goes on to describe the common folk, casting light on the living
conditions of those at the bottom of the social milieu, in contradistinction to Clann
Bhruaideadha as members of the learned class:
ná mór-aigneadh na muinntrei-se an uair shuidhidh i n-a mbothógaibh cromlúbánacha creat-lomnochta ag comhól ar a chéile dá gcuidhinibh béil-fhliucha
blaithche is dá dtobannaibh mór-chluasacha meidhge bruidearnaighe, 7 ag
éisteacht nr hagallaimh is re holl-ghlór a n-ainmíle teadh n-éigciallaidh ’na nuirthimcheal is gach [aon aca] ag tabhairt aithne go hurmhaisneach ar uraghall
is ar fhoirbhéicigh gacha hainmhidhe seach ar oile.
[nor (is) the commonfolk’s spirit and pride (greater) when they sit in their crooked,
bare-walled cottages, drinking against each other from their overflowing bowls
of buttermilk and their big-handled vessels of bubbling whey, listening to the
chattering and uproar of the senseless beasts about them, each of them cleverly
distinguishing the chatter and roaring of each beast].77
The rest of the poem establishes the noble credentials of the Clanrickard Bourkes whose
warriors listen to bardic poetry and drink strong, fermented drinks. In writing about his
great-uncle, Friar Antonius Bruodinus relates how Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha
composed poems in Latin and Irish. Bruodinus refers to one poem which light-heartedly
divided Ireland between Tadhg mac Dáire and the sons of John de Burgo. We can
probably take this as an error in the name of patron for the poem was dedicated to a Seaán
(John) son of ‘Riocaird’. Bruodinus remarks:
Nobis qui Domini Thaddaei Bruodini scripta, & poëmata praemanibus habemus,
praesertim jocosos illos Rithmos Latino-Hibernicos, quibus Hiberniam inter se, &
Illustrissimi Domini Joannis de Burgo filios, jucunde divisit (ex quibus abunde
constat illum in lingva latina fuisse fundatissimum….78
[To us, who have before our very hands Master Thaddaeus Bruodin’s writings and
poems, especially those playful Latin-Irish Verses, in which he delightfully divided Ireland between himself and the sons of the most illustrious Sir John de Burgo
(from which it is abundantly proved that he was most thoroughly instructed in the
Latin language…]79
Friar Bruodinus possessed considerable authority on the matter and it is conceivable that
some poems were entrusted to him as a learned clerical kinsman of the family. He may
75 Simington, Books of Survey and Distribution, pp 533-4.
76 McKenna, ‘A Partition of Ireland’, The Irish Monthly vol . 57 (July-December, 1929) pp 368-372:368.
77 Ibid., pp 368-9.
78 O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, p. 116.
79 Author’s translation.
92
LUKE McINERNEY
have had family documents in his possession when he was guardian of the friary of Our
Lady of the Snows in Prague in the 1660s and 1670s. Bruodinus’ identification of Tadhg
mac Dáire as the author of this poem which places Lettermoylan and Slieve Callan at the
centre of the poet’s allegorical territory, supports the view that Lettermoylan of Clann
Bhruaideadha situated on the slopes of Slieve Callan.
A reference also exists to Slieve Callan (‘Sléibhe Colláin’) in a poetic elugey of
uncertain attribution.80 Slieve Callan is referred to among the poetical exchange between
Tadhg mac Dáire and the Ulster poets known as Iomarbhágh na bhfileadh (‘Contention
of the Bards’) about whether the Ó Briain or the Ó Domhnaill had the best right to
consider themselves heirs to the high kingship of Ireland. The exchange was instigated in
c.1616 when Tadhg mac Dáire became involved in a poetic contention with the poets of
Ulster.81 In a poem critical of Tadhg mac Dáire’s learning, Roibeard Mac Artúir belittles
Tadhg mac Dáire’s acquisition of knowledge, and refers to Slieve Callan:
Daoine eile dá rádh ris; go bhfuair seisean an t-eo fis ó Aoibhill ban-fháidh síl
mBloid; atá aige na caraid.
Muna gcreididh-se a n-éabhairt; tigidh ar gach aird d’féachain iongantair mhór
seacha soin; rein-Shliabh Callain re n-iodhnaibh.
[Others say of him (Tadhg mac Dáire) that he got the knowledge-salmon from
Aoibheall who is his friend, the prophetess of Blod’s race. If you do not believe
him, come from all parts to see a greater marvel still, old Slieve Callan in
travail!].82
He continues:
Dá bhfiafraighidh cia an toirrchear; ó Shliabh Callain do coimpreadh aithchim
ar bhar n-éigse sibh; gabháil díbh ar bhar ngáiribh an uair do mheas gach
Muimhneach; do chonnairc méad a bhuilgsean gein an-mhór uaidhe do bhreith;
acht luch féir uaidh níor tuismeadh.
[If you ask what was the progeny conceived by Slieve Callan I implore of you by
your poetic profession to restrain your laughter, for when every man of Mumha
who saw the great swelling imagined that an enormous progeny was being brought
forth there was born – only a field mouse!] 83
Clearly the intended meaning of the ‘progeny’ conceived by Slieve Callan was Tadhg
mac Dáire and his lack of skill in the art of poetic knowledge. In another poem composed
by Roibeard Mac Artúir mention is made to Leitir Maoláin. The poem refers to Tadhg
mac Dáire’s poem to the Clanrickard Bourkes in c.1580 and leaves little ambiguity as to
Leitir Maoláin being in the hands of Tadhg mac Dáire at that time:
80 See Port oireachais Ara Chliach in RIA MS 3 (23/L/17), 141b. Also see Damian McManus & Eoghan Ó Raghallaigh
(eds), A Bardic Miscellany (Dublin, 2010) pp 541-4. The poetic eulogy to Toirdhealbhach Ó Briain Ara (d.1400) is
attributed to both Domhnall Ó Maolchonaire and Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha.
81 See Joep Leerssen, The Contention of the Bards (London, 1994).
82 Rev. L. McKenna (ed.), Iomarbhágh na bhfileadh: The Contention of the Bards, Part I (London, 1918) pp 158-9.
83 Ibid. The last line could be an allusion to Horace, the classical lyric poet, who satirically wrote ‘parturient montes,
nascetur ridiculus mus’ (‘the mountains go into labour and give birth to a ridiculous mouse’). I thank Prof. Joep Leerssen
for this reference.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
93
An file d’fhuil Éibhir Fhinn,
thagras go beacht dá thaoibh rinn
isé go glic do rinne
roinn na tíre adeirimid-ne.
Leitir Mhaoláin, gidh nach mín,
a chuid ronna fé[i]n don tír;
Inis Fódla ó soin amach
fágbhuidh fa chlannuibh Búrcach.84
[The poet of Éibhear Finn’s blood who argues his side perfectly with me;
we (I) say he cleverly divided the country.
Leitir Mhaoláin, though not smooth, is his own share of the country;
he will leave Inis Fódla (Ireland) from that out to the Bourkes.]85
Slieve Callan and district was forefront in the minds of Meic Bhruaideadha poets. As
demonstrated by the references to Slieve Callan by poets supporting the Ulster side of the
‘Contention’, the area was known to have an association with Clann Bhruaideadha. This
is because Slieve Callan was the residence of cognate branches of Clann Bhruaideadha:
Lettermoylan and Formoyle, and slightly further afield, Knockanalban and Doonogan;
the latter two places contained a crannóg and a towerhouse residence.86
Tadhg mac Dáire & Lettermoylan
In identifying the status of Lettermoylan it is useful to look at the known facts of the Meic
Bhruaideadha and their proprietorial arrangements. There is evidence suggesting that
Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha had landed interests at Lettermoylan, despite
recent scholarship on the issue.87 Tadhg mac Dáire’s principal residence was at Knockanalban (Mount Scott, Mons Scoti), according to the writings Friar Antonius Bruodinus:
Momoniensium partes scriptis, & verbis tuebatur patruus meus magnus, bonae
memoriae, Dominus Thaddaeus mac Bruodin, seu de Bruodin, Darij filius, Dominus de Monte Scoti.88
[The cause of the people of Munster was defended through writings and (spoken)
words by my great uncle of good memory, master Thaddaeus Mac Bruodin, or the
Bruodin, son of Darius, (and) proprietor of Mount Scott]89
We read in a Latin deed of 1606 that Tadhg mac Dáire was a ‘feofee for uses’ on three
and a half quarters of land in Clondagad parish in the Barony of Islands, and he gave his
residence as ‘Thadeus McBruodine de Corkanalabuna’ (Knockanalban).90 While not in
actual possession of this land which was owned by Clann Mhic Mhathghamhna but
84 Cuthbert Mhág Craith, Dán na mBráthar Mionúr (Dublin, 1967) pp 178-94.
85 I wish to acknowledge the assistance of Dr Michelle O Riordan of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies (DIAS) in the
translation of these passages.
86 Carol Gleeson, ‘Knockanalban Crannog(s), Co. Clare’, The Other Clare, vol. 13 (1989) pp 32-4. The author visited the
site of Knockanalban crannóg in September 2011 and notes that a levelled stone structure can still be discerned in the
centre of the surrounding marshy land and wooded thicket.
87 Gearóid Mac Eoin, ‘Crosántacht Íorónta a Cúlra agus a hÚdar’, in Máirtín Ó Briain & Pádraig Ó Héalaí (eag.), Téada
dúchais: aistí in ómós don ollamh Breandán Ó Madagáin (Indreabhán, Gaillimh, 2002) pp 113- 19:119.
88 Bruodinus, Propugnaculum Catholicae Veritatis, p. 851.
89 Author’s translation.
90 National Library of Ireland: MS 45,669/2 (dated 1606). The identifiable land denominations in Clondagad parish include
Knockalehid, Ballycloghessy and Dehomad.
94
LUKE McINERNEY
rather acting as a trustee, Tadhg mac Dáire’s interest was probably on account of his
marriage to Áine, daughter of Tadhg Mac Mathghamhna.91
The five quarters of land in the barony of Ibrickan which Tadhg mac Dáire possessed
in 1615 made him a substantial landholder.92 As Tadhg mac Dáire held his estate at
Knockanalban rent free93 the implication that he had an interest in Lettermoylan suggests
that it was collective family property with proprietorship vested in the agnatic dearbhfhine of Clann Bhruaideadha. Tadhg mac Dáire also appears in the Great Office inquisition taken in 1618 for Inchiquin barony; there he appears holding ‘Lettermollan’ while
also holding lesser interests in Racahaine, Formoiluoghtare, Kurragh, Formoil-Iaghter,
Rolloduff, Cloonahaha along with other kinsmen.94 In the Great Office inquisition of
1621 he was a juror and of ‘Lettermollan’ but also held Ballidubeg, indicating that his
landholding was dispersed but interwined with other members of Clann Bhruaideadha.95
Some scholars have pointed out that Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha was a
minor figure before 1615.96 While he was never recognised as the Mac Bruaideadha
ollamh the fact that he held Knockanalban free from rent implies his literary activities
were rewarded by the Earl of Thomond. Tadhg mac Dáire arbitrated a deed in 1606 for
the Earl though it is clear from this deed that he was not the Mac Bruaideadha.97 That
title was held by Connor the son of Maoilín Óg as can be discerned from the Mac
Bruaideadha signatories of the deed; ‘Connor Brodyn otherwise McBrodye and Teig
McBrodyn’. Tadhg mac Dáire served as a juror on an inquisition into the lands of the Earl
of Thomond in 1619 where he gave his residence as ‘Lettermoelane’98 and he turns up in
other contemporary deeds written in Irish, indicating that his signature was sought after.99
Tadhg mac Dáire’s fosterage connection with the Earl of Thomond placed the poet as
a leading kinsman of Clann Bhruaideadha, despite him not holding the ollamh-ship:
Catholico ritu Baptizatus, as tandem delicate lactatus, nutritus per annos 7 in
Domo viri illustris, Domini Cornelij Clanchi, Domini de Inse & Finola Bruodin
ejus uxoris. Crescente aetate Principis pueri, parentis jussu, Dominus Thadeus
91 Bruodinus notes that ‘Thaddeus Bruodinus, Darij de Monte Scoti filius, in uxorem habuit Annam Mahuny, seu Mathei,
illustris viri D.[ominus] Thadei de Tuonafarna filiam’ [‘Taddy Bruodin, the son of Darius of Mount Scott, took a wife
Anna Mahuny or Mathei [i.e McMahon] who was the daughter of the illustrious master Thady of Tuonafarna’].
Tuonafarna can be identified as Tuath na Fearna which corresponded to the parish of Killadysert, and was under the
lordship of Clann Mhic Mhathghamhna. It also appears that Tadhg mac Dáire’s sister Bridget married into Clann Mhic
Mhathghamhna of Tuonafarna, her husband being Cornelius MacMohony (seu Matthaei). O’Mollony, Anatomicum
Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, pp 124, 129.
92 Petworth House Archive, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
93 See Petworth House Archive, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615]; and Petworth House Archive, ‘An abstract of such
rents and renenewes as doe belonge to the right Hon. Henrye Earle of Thomond [1626]’, Petworth House Archives,
Chichester, MS No. C27/A 39.
94 Petworth House Archive, MS 16.B.E, [Great Office of Inchiquin Barony taken 1 September, 1618]. Landholding of other
kinsmen in 1618 may be abstracted thus: Connor McBrodin of Kilky; Shane McBrodin of Kilky; Cosny McBrodin of
Balliogane; Cury McBrodin of Balliogane; Dary McBrodin and Donill McBrodin of Formoil Iaghtare; and Dary
McBrodin of Ballindornish and Cloonanahy. A reference exists to a Teig McBrodin of Cloonginy, and who held a parcel
of the two quarters of Formoile. This may in fact be Tadhg mac Dáire. The fragmented landholdings in the 1618 and 1621
Great Offices supports the view that the property of the family was held by partible inheritance among the dearbhfhine of
Clann Bhruaideadha. I thank Kenneth Nicholls for this reference.
95 Petworth House Archive, MS 16.B.E, [Great Office of Inchiquin Barony taken of 27 March 1621]. I thank Kenneth
Nicholls for this reference.
96 Leerssen, Contention of the Bards, p. 33.
97 See Petworth House Archive, MS C.13/34a) [23 September 1606]. Also printed in Luke McInerney, ‘Documents from the
Thomond Papers at the Petworth House Archive’, Archivium Hibernicum, vol. lxiv (2011) pp 7-49:42.
98 The reference in the inquisition reads: ‘Thady Mac Brody de Lettermoelane’. Petworth House Archive, MS B.26.T.16) on
1 April 1619. Also see John Ainsworth (ed.), The Inchiquin Manuscripts (Dublin, 1961) p. 325 [no.1011].
99 See Hardiman (ed.), ‘Ancient Irish Deeds’ p. 60 (undated); p. 81 (1592); p. 84 (1594) along with Dermot McBrody.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
95
Bruodinus Finola frater, curam illius accepit, illumque sub sua disciplina in
diversis hiberniae locis, in quibus studuit, per annos 14 habuit, tandem mortuo
Catholico suo parente, Juvenis Comes 21 circiter tunc agens annum, in Angliam,
cum suo Praefecto Bruodino navigavit; ubi persvasione Thomas Butler, Ormaniae
tunc potentissimi Comitis (ut Reginae favores sibi conciliaret) a fide defecit
Catholica. Post dutos tandem annos in Hibernia Comes una Thadeo Bruodino,
Catholico suo Praefecto venit; ubi Thadeus ex illustrissima Mohuniorum familia
uxorem duxit.100
[(Donough O’Brien was) Baptized under the Catholic rite, delicately nursed,
nurtured for seven years in the house of that illustrious man, Master Cornelius
Clanchi, master of Ennis, and Finola Bruodin, his wife. Over the course of the boy
prince’s years, master Thady Bruodin, the brother of Finola, received the care of
him by order of his parents, and kept him for fourteen years under his tutorage at
diverse places in Ireland, where he studied; when at last his own Catholic parent
died, the young earl, at about the age of 21 years, sailed for England with his guardian Bruodin; whereupon through the persuasion of Thomas Butler, at that time
the powerful Earl of Ormond, he forsook the Catholic faith (in order to commend
himself to the Queen’s favours). Finally after two years [back] to Ireland the Earl,
together with Thady Bruodin, his Catholic guardian arrived; whereupon Thady
Bruodin took a wife from the most illustrious family of the Mahons.]101
The claim that the Earl was fostered by Tadhg mac Dáire’s sister Finola who was the wife
of Conchubhar Mac Fhlannchadha (Cornelius Clanchi) of Ennis for seven years before
being placed under the tutledge of Tadhg mac Dáire, confirms Tadhg’s standing. As
Tadhg mac Dáire died in 1625-26 and not the mid-seventeenth century as O’Flanagan
implausibly relates,102 it is necessary to reconsider an earlier birthdate of c.1550103 which
reconcile these claims set out by Bruodinus. An earlier birthdate would account for the
fact that the Earl was in England in 1577.104
Such affinity between Tadhg mac Dáire and the Earl may account for the direct
personal poems that he addressed to the Earl.105 This, despite the title ollamh seanchais
was held by Maoilín Óg.106 The poems composed by Maoilín Óg, the official ollamh
seanchais of Thomond, were formulaic and in a prescribed style, fitting for an official
poet to Ó Briain. Maoilín Óg followed the traditional occupation of compiling annals,
that is, chronicling events for his Uí Bhriain patrons, a point confirmed by Antonius
100 O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, pp 112-13.
101 Author’s translation.
102 Theophilus O’Flanagan, ‘Advice to a Prince’, Transactions Gaelic Society, vol. 1 (1808) p. 27.
103 A birthdate of c.1540/1550 would seem realistic if he accompanied Donough O’Brien to England in 1577. This birthdate
is accepted by some scholars. See Máirín Ní Dhonnchadha, (ed.), The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing Volumes IV:
Courts and Cotereies II 1500-1800 (Cork, 2005) p. 452. Ní Dhonnchadha follows Leerssen who suggests that Tadhg mac
Dáire died after 1625. See Leerssen, Contention of the Bards, pp 33-4.
104 H.C. Hamilton (ed.), Calendar of State Papers Ireland: Elizabeth I, 1574-85 (London, 1867) p. 113. Also see J.S. Brewer
& W. Bullen (eds), Calendar of the Carew Manuscripts Preserved in the Archiepiscopal Library at Lambeth 1575-1588,
(London, 1868) p. 115. The latter reference notes that Donough O’Brien, son of Conor O’Brien third Earl of Thomond,
had been ‘brought up here in our Court’.
105 Tadhg mac Dáire addressed five poems to his patron Donough O’Brien, fourth Earl of Thomond. In particular see Mór
atá ar theagasc flatha (‘a major task to instruct a prince’) which was probably written in c.1599. His other notable poem
was the eulogy on the death of the Earl in 1624 titled Eascar Gaoidheal éag aoinfhir (‘The death of one man entails the
overthrow of the Gael’). On the dating of the former see Leerssen, Contention of the Bards, p. 43 and on the latter see
Ó Cuív, ‘An elegy on Donnchadh Ó Briain’, pp 87-105. Several of Tadhg mac Dáire’s poems have been preserved in the
Duanaire Uí Bhriain (‘Poem book of the O’Briens’). See Maynooth MS M 107, [Duanaire Uí Bhriain].
106 See Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1599, 1602. The annals confirm that Maoilín Óg held the position of ollamh.
96
LUKE McINERNEY
Bruodinus.107 Maoilín Óg’s poems tended to focus on genealogical themes such as
Cuirfead comaoin ar Chlainn Tail (‘I will lay an obligation on the descendants of Tál’)108
along with themes concerning enumeration of lordship. By contrast, Tadhg mac Dáire
cultivated a personal relationship with the Earl which is marked by his direct advicepoem to the Earl, Mór atá ar theagasc flatha (‘A major task to instruct a prince’).109
Tadhg mac Dáire’s elegy on the death of the Earl illustrates his personal attachment to his
patron and his direct personal style leaves us in little doubt that he saw himself as the preeminent poet of the Earl of Thomond’s household. In a prophetic remark in his poem
Eascar Gaoidheal éag aoinfhir (‘The death of one man entails the overthrow of the
Gael’) composed on the death of the Earl, Tadhg mac Dáire laments:
A Dhé, dá dtagradh tusa
Budh furtacht é dom urchra-sa
M’éag ina ghoire go grod
An t-éag roimhe ó nach ránag.
[O God, since I did not attain death before him it would be a help
for my grief if you would ordain that I should die near him shortly]110
This proved to be prophetic as Tadhg mac Dáire was dead by 1626, two years after writing the verse. Despite being what can only be described as a political functionary in his
role as a poetic apologist for the Earl of Thomond, Tadhg mac Dáire’s learning and literary achievements were considerable. Friar Antonius Bruodinus wrote that he was a multilingual literatus; no doubt a product of the native schools of filidheacht and seanchas:
Dominus Thaddeaus mac Bruodin, seu de Bruodin, Darij filius, Dominus de
Monte Scoti…. (qui Familiae suae senior, seu caput erat, & Excellentissimi,
Illustrissimique Domini, Donati Magni o Brien; Tuomoniae Comitis, & Momoniae
tunc Praesidis, Aulae Praefectus) ut erat in Graecis, Latinis, Anglicis, & Hibernicis litteris apprime doctus, & in antiquitatibus Regni, praedecessorum more,
versatissimus....111
[Master Thaddeaus MacBruodin, or the Bruodin, the son of Darius, of Mount
Scott [Knockanalban] (who was the ‘senior’, or head, of his family, and prefect of
the court of the most excellent and most illustrious Master Donatus the Great
O’Brien, Earl of Thomond, and then President of Munster), being exceedingly
learned in Greek, Latin, English and Irish literature and in the manner of his
predecessors, extremely well-versed in the antiquities of the realm.112
107 Bruodinus writes: ‘Donatus O Brien Caribrac dictus Limericensi & Tuomonia, pijssimus simul, & potentissimu
Princeps: Qui (ut legitur in Bruodinorum Chronicis, & refert Milerus Juvensis mac Bruodin, seu de Bruodine, in Elogijs
O Brienorum) per varias alias Hiberniae partes, fundavit, & dotavit 80 monasteria, parochiales ecclesiasa, & sacella’
[‘Donatus O Brien known as Caribrac of Limerick and Thomond, both a most pious and powerful prince: Who (as we
read in the Bruodin chronicles, and Milerus the younger [Maoilín Óg] mac Bruodin, or the Bruodin, mentions him in the
Eulogies of the O Briens) founded and endowed 80 monasteries, parish churches and shrines through various other parts
of Ireland’]. These annals, or the ‘Book of Maoilín Óg Mac Bruaideadha’, covered the period 1588-1603 and was used in
the compilation of the Annals of the Four Masters (Annála Ríoghachta Eireann). See Bernadette Cunningham, ‘The
Historical Annals of Maoilín Óg Mac Bruaideadha, 1588-1603’, The Other Clare, vol. 13 (1989) pp 21-4; and Bruodinus,
Propugnaculum Catholicae Veritatis, p. 967.
108 See RIA MS 1080 (B/iv/2). Also see McManus & Ó Raghallaigh (eds), A Bardic Miscellany, pp 175-9.
109 O’Flanagan, ‘Advice to a Prince’, pp 31-54.
110 Ó Cuív, ‘An elegy on Donnchadh Ó Briain’ p. 101. Also see Martin Breen, The History of Bunratty Castle (Ruan, 2012)
pp 19-20.
111 Bruodinus, Propugnaculum Catholicae Veritatis, pp 851-2.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
97
Evidence suggests that Tadhg mac Dáire was in Dublin in 1617 probably as part of Earl
of Thomond’s retinue.113 However, little evidence exists that he travelled to the continent
in the 1620s despite his name somewhat ambiguously appearing in a list of Irish poets
compiled by O’Sullivan Beare.114 The inclusion of his name under a list of Irish physicians on the continent in the 1620s is no real proof that Tadhg mac Dáire travelled
abroad, despite his renown.
Lettermoylan termonland
In fully grasping the history of Clann Bhruaideadha is it necessary to consider the
significance of Lettermoylan. Our most definitive record of Lettermoylan and its connection with Clann Bhruaideadha occurs in the notebook of Bishop Worth (1660-1669),
Protestant Bishop of Killaloe. In the notebook of Bishop Worth, proof may be obtained
that Lettermoylan was ecclesiastical property held by the Meic Bhruaideadha, and that in
1617 kinsmen of the family were disputing the right of Bishop John Rider in leasing
Lettermoylan to new tenants:
Littermoylan: Arable & pasture 333a; pasture & mountain 1,232a; pasture & bog
147a in ye survey profitable 463a, unprofitable 1,249a. The release hereof to ye
Bishop challenged by virtue of an old lease by heirs of Teige McBroodie and
Gillibrode McBroodie but set by me to Mr Hobson….Teige McBroodyn and
Gillibride McBroodyn released to ye Bishop of Killaloe the half quarter of Lettermoylan 6 Martii 1617.115
This passage is an unmistakable reference to Lettermoylan being situated on Slieve
Callan. The fact that it appeared under the termon of Dysert confounded scholars in
assuming that Lettermoylan belonged in the modern parish of Dysert and subsumed
under an alias land division. In 1614 the Protestant Bishop of Killaloe, John Rider, wrote
to the Lord Deputy seeking assistance in recovering church lands. In respect to Lettermoylan Bishop Rider wrote:
…and also Teig McBroodie gent., denyth to yield the like possession of the houses
and mancons [sic] within the half quarter of land called Littermolane within the
parish of Dysert although the said Sheriff hath given your petitioner [i.e. Bishop of
Killaloe] possession of the said half quarter at which persons still remain in the
said houses, plough and pasture upon the said lands and take the rents thereof to
their own use to the great damage and impoverishing of your petitioner…to call
the said parties being now in town…and give directions to the right honourable
Earl of Thomond or the Sheriff of Co. Clare to take […] that your petitioner may
quietly enjoy such lands…116
Lord Baron Inchiquin
William Nelan
John O’Griffa Gents.
Teig McBrody
112 Author’s translation.
113 Leerssen, Contention of the Bards, p. 65.
114 His name appears under its Latinised form, ‘Thaddaeus MacBruodinus’ but with no other particulars. Rev. Aubrey
Gwynn, S.J., ‘An Unpublished Work of Philip O’Sullivan Beare’, Analecta Hibernica, no.6 (1934) pp 1-11:11.
115 MS 1777, Typescript copy of a survey of lands in the diocese of Killaloe made for Bishop Worth, 1661, pp 31-2.
116 ‘Petition to the Lord Deputy and Council of John [Rider] Bishop of Killaloe’, c.1614 (National Library of Ireland: MS
45,686/1) also see Ainsworth (ed.), Inchiquin Manuscripts, p. 432. [no.1318].
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LUKE McINERNEY
It is apparent from this document that the lands around Lettermoylan were of mixed
economic activity; ploughland and pasture, and that there were different types of
dwellings that may cautiously be interpreted as ‘houses’ (i.e. cabins and lesser quality
dwellings) and ‘mansions’ (i.e. substantial dwellings). As we have seen earlier the Meic
Bhruaideadha released Lettermoylan to the bishop on 6 March 1617. The lease was taken
over by William Hobson who was recorded as a ‘tituladoe’ of the former Clann Bhruaideadha property at Knockanalban in 1659.117
Moynoe termonland
A branch of Clann Bhruaideadha was based at Moynoe in east Co. Clare where they were
hereditary keepers of the eleventh-century manuscript Saltair Chaimín.118 The manuscript was presented to Friar Micheál Ó Cléirigh in the 1630s when he was seeking
material for his compilation, Annála Ríoghachta Éireann.119 The nature of Clann Bhruaideadha’s land holding on church lands at Tearmonn Chaimín at Moynoe120 is uncertain,
but it is does suggest a medieval (erenagh?) connection with the church and termon:
4 q[uarters] of Moynoe were claimed by the possessors as their fee. [On] 6
Jan[uary] 1617 fflan McBroodyn, Charles ali[a]s Callogh Mac Broodyn, Donogh
O Cormochan and David Mac Cormochan surrendered and released all their
interests therein [spelling modernised].121
From 1638 the Meic Bhruaideadha of Moynoe entered into a series of leases on the
church land with New English settlers.122 They also appear to have held lands on termon
Tulla where, in 1627, Constance Brody of Tyredagh testified at an inquisition into the
historical extent of termon Tulla and where the reliquary known as ‘Moghully’s black
book’ (i.e. St Mochuilla) was produced as evidence.123 The Meic Bhruaideadha still held
land in Inishcaltra parish in 1641 where they were said to have had a burial cypyt.124
Further, we read the remark by Friar Antonius Bruodinus confirming that Clann
Bhruaideadha had hereditary lands in the vicinity of Lough Derg.125 His remark clearly
meant the Meic Bhruaideadha branches at Inishcaltra and Clonrush, of which Flann
McBroodyn was head in the 1630s.126
117 Séamus Pender (ed.), Census of Ireland circa 1659 (Dublin, 1939) Kilmurry parish. Also see MS 1777, Typescript copy
of a survey of lands in the diocese of Killaloe made for Bishop Worth, 1661, pp 33-4.
118 McGrath, ‘Materials for a History of Clann Bhruaideadha’, p. 51.
119 Chris O’Mahony & Brian Ó Dálaigh, ‘A Seventeenth Century Description of Co. Clare’, Dal gCais, no. 9 (1988) pp 27-
38:37 [note 40].
120 A land denomination there was known as Knockbrody at the time of the Tithe Applotment Books in 1825. The
denomination was not subsequently recorded in Griffith Valuation of the 1850s. Tithe Applotment Books, Moynoe parish,
[20th November 1825].
121 MS 1777, Typescript copy of a survey of lands in the diocese of Killaloe made for Bishop Worth, 1661, pp 7-8.
122 Ibid., pp 8-9.
123 RIA MS 24 D 17, pp.45-46. The inquisition stated that Constance Brody of Tyredagh in Tulla parish was aged 80 when
he testified at the inquisition in 1627 and that he had dwelt at Tyredagh for 54 years.
124 Bruodinus, Propugnaculum Catholicae Veritatis, p. 968.
125 Ibid., p. 77. Friar Antonius Bruodinus was well acquainted with Clann Bhruaideadha of Moynoe as he writes that he saw
there the library of Flann Mac Bruaideadha. This must have occurred sometime in the 1630s, see ibid., p. 770.
126 On Flann Mac Bruaideadha (alias Florentius) and that he was regarded as the Mac Bruaideadha at this time, see ibid.,
p. 770.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
99
We are told by Friar Antonius Bruodinus that a library existed at Moynoe in the
1630s.127 The library was in the possession of Flann Mac Bruaideadha. Flann Mac
Bruaideadha is first recorded as dwelling on the termon of Moynoe in 1621 when he
occupied one quarter of Aughrim in Tuamgraney parish on the border with Moynoe
parish.128 It would appear that at this library Micheál Ó Cléirigh saw a copy of Saltair
Chaimín in 1636, but that Flann was already dead by the time Ó Cléirigh arrived at
Tearmonn Chaimín.129 It is worth quoting Bruodinus’ description of the library and its
ancient texts at length:
vidi insuper ego non semel in Bibliotheca minimae meae familiae Senioris (vulgo
mac Bruodin) nobilis viri, D. Florentii mac Bruodin, Domini de Moyneo, antiquissimas Regni Hiberniae historias, ante tot saecula a Bruodinis in membrana
mundissime exaratas, et doubus Tomis (quorum unus Rufus, et alter Ruber dicitur)
contentas. In Rufo omnia facta Regum et Principum Familiarum (praesertim vero
earum quae ex Eibero, Mileri Hispani, pimique ex illa stirpe Regis Hiberniae,
descenderunt) continebantur. In Rubro vero libro, inter alia arbores genealogicae,
non solum Regiae O Brienorum Familiae, sed et praecipuarum omnium Hibenicarum familiarum artificiose collocatae videntur.130
[Moreover, I myself have seen not [just] once in the library of the Senior (Mac
Bruodin) of my very humble family, [i.e.,] of the noble Master Florence Mac
Bruodin, Master of Moynoe, the most ancient histories of the Kingdom of Ireland,
set down on parchment by the Mac Bruodins very neatly so many centuries ago,
and contained within two volumes (of which one is called Rufus [‘Reddish’] and
the other Ruber [‘Red’]). In Rufus were contained all the deeds of the families of
kings and princes (but especially of those that have descended from Eiber [i.e
Éibhear Fionn), the son of Milerus the Spaniard [i.e. Míl Espáine], and of the first
King of Ireland from that branch). In the book Ruber, however, there can be seen,
skillfully put together, among other things, genealogical trees, not only of the
royal family of the O’Briens, but also of all the principal Irish families].131
The book Rubro vero libro, (‘the Red Book’) which contained genealogical tracts of
some antiquity might be a reference to the Leabhar Ruadh Muimhneach that was penned
by Murchadh Riabhach Ó Cuinnlis in c.1400 and was preserved at Quin Friary when
Ó Cléirigh visited.132 Clearly Clann Bhruaideadha at Moynoe also followed the profession of chronicling in the same manner as the Lettermoylan and Ibrickan branches. A
127 The location of the Clann Bhruaideadh residence and library at Moynoe is not known. However, a castle-like structure
situated next to Moynoe church may in fact have served as a scriptorium and a safe place for the storage of manuscripts.
A similar situation may also have transpired at Urlanbeg in Kilmaleery parish where a small castle-like structure may
represent a place for the production of mansucripts for the brehon Meic Fhlannchadha lineage, rather than being a
towerhouse. On the castles of Co. Clare see R.W. Twigge, ‘Edward White’s Description of Thomond in 1574’, North
Munster Archaeological Society Journal, vol. 1. no. 2. (1910) pp 75-85.
128 Petworth House Archive, MS B.16.B, [Great Office of Tulla Barony taken 28 March 1621]. Flann held Aughrim in
mortgage from Luke Brady of Tuamgraney. I thank Kenneth Nicholls for this reference.
129 McGrath, ‘Materials for a History of Clann Bhruaideadha’, p. 51.
130 Bruodinus, Propugnaculum Catholicae Veritati,s, p. 770.
131 Author’s translation.
132 Edel Bhreathnach, ‘The mendicant orders and vernacular Irish learning in the late medieval period’, Irish Historical
Studies, vol. xxxvii, no. 147 (May 2011) pp 357-75:363; and see McGrath, ‘Materials for a History of Clann Bhruaideadha’, [note 10].
100
LUKE McINERNEY
connection between Clann Bhruaideadha and the library of Quin Friary is plausible given
the attraction of learned families to mendicant orders in the later medieval period.
Friar Antonius Bruodinus is silent regarding Lettermoylan. Rather, Bruodinus is
prolific when it comes to identifying Meic Bhruaideadha kinsmen at Slieve Callan (viz.
Mons Callani).133 Although Bruodinus should be read with caution and the usual caveats
apply to this first-class propagandist for Clann Bhruaideadha, he is an important witness
to the genealogy and landholding of the family. Bruodinus’ father was Milerus (Maoilín)
of the Ballyogan branch of Clann Bhruaideadha in Kilraghtis parish (and which had land
in adjoining Inchicronan).134 His line of the family can be traced to the mid-sixteenth
century Dáire, father of poet Tadhg, and who had land at Ballyogan as well as at
Knockanalban in Ibrickan.135 Bruodinus must have had access to family manuscripts
when he compiled his work Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici and he possibly
benefited from the assistance of clerical cousins for specific facts.136 It is known that
six of the family became Franciscans in the seventeenth century,137 several of whom were
appointed guardians of Ennis Friary.138 From Bruodinus we can grasp certain facts
concerning Clann Bhruaideadha and their ecclesiastical connections. According to
Bruodinus the Meic Bhruaideadha residence at Mons Scoti (Knockanalban) never paid
rent to the Bishop of Killaloe as it was not designated ecclesiastical land and that it was
hereditary property:
Mons Scoti…in baronia est de Ibrickan, in qua nec Abbas, nec Episcopus ullus
pedem terrae unquam habuit. Dominum Thaddeus Bruodinum ac post illius
obtium, Dominum Jacobum, Thadei filium, montis Scoti fuisse Dominum nobis
Tuomoniensibus notum est.139
[Mount Scott is in the barony of Ibrickan, in which neither any abbot, nor any
bishop ever held a foot of land. It is known to us Tuomoniensibus [i.e.‘Thomondmen’] that master Thaeddeus Bruodinus and, after his death, master Jacobus, the
son of Thad[d]eus, had been the proprietor of Mount Scott]140
His statement here was factually correct but deliberately partial in its purpose. As his
work was generated in response to an attack from fellow Franciscan Thomas Carew141
which admonished Bruodinus’ prior writings on Clann Bhruaideadha, Bruodinus omitted
the fact that rather it was Lettermoylan that paid a rent to the Bishop of Killaloe. The
1641 Books of Survey and Distribution confirm that Lettermoylan remained in the hands
133 O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, pp 44-5, 123-32.
134 Ibid., pp 42, 126.
135 Ibid., p. 124. On Dáire it reads: ‘Darius Bruodinus, Dominus Montis Scoti, Balliscanlan, Balliogan, etc., Finolam
Grajam, Donati de Balli An Crow filiam in uxorem habuit’. [Darius Bruodin, master of Mount Scott, Ballyscanlan,
Ballyogan, etc, had as a wife Finola Grajam, the daughter of Donough of Ballyancrow].
136 Perhaps Bonaventura Bruodinus, a professor of philosophy and theology in Prague, was at his side when he compiled his
works in the 1660s and early 1670s. On Bonaventura see Alice Stopford Green, The making of Ireland and its undoing,
1200-1600 (London, 1908, p. 455.
137 McGrath, ‘Materials for a History of Clann Bhruaideadha’, p. 50.
138 Patrick Conlan, Franciscan Ennis (Athlone, 1984) pp 64-5.
139 O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, p. 109.
140 Author’s translation.
141 Carew’s (or Carves as it is written) main work refuting Bruodinus was Thomas Carves, Responsio Veridica Ad Illotum
Libellum Cui Nomen Anatomicum Examen P. Antonii Bruodini Hiberni..Sub Ementito Nomine P. Cornelii O Molloni
Editum, Sulzbach, 1672.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
101
of the Established Church and later was leased to the Synge family into the nineteenth
century. A letter from 1689 by John Roane, Bishop of Killaloe, reveals that Lettermoylan
remained episcopal mensal land at that later date.142
Lettermoylan in other records
We find from placenames on Slieve Callan that the mountain was used for transhumance
grazing and it is likely that the Meic Bhruaideadha had herds of cattle which grazed on
the summer pastures of Slieve Callan. Placenames such as Boolyduff (Buaile Dhubh,
‘dark pasture’) and Boolynagreana (Loch Buaile na Gréine, ‘lake of the sunny pasture’)
serve as a reminder of transhumance activity on Slieve Callan. Such places were established ‘boolying’ sites from at least the seventeenth century.143
Sources of income for learned lineages included fees for serving as public notaries
and acting as scribes of legal documents.144 In Gaelic lordships wealth was measured
both in the amount of cattle one possessed and the amount of retainers attached to a
lineage. The Gaelic learned class were noted to have been endowed with great herds
of cattle. This point is attested in the 1599 raid into Cinéal Fearmhaic by Aodh Ruadh
Ó Domhnaill who plundered the cattle of Maoilín Óg Mac Bruaideadha, only to restore
the cattle to the poet and receive, in return, a favourable poetic quatrain.145 Ó Domhnaill
also rustled the cattle of Tadhg mac Dáire, though the raid received a more condemnatory
reception from the poet,146 probably on account of Tadhg mac Dáire’s personal closeness
to the Earl of Thomond.
Signatures in documents from the late sixteenth century confirm Lettermoylan as one
of the chief residences of Clann Bhruaideadha. We read in an indenture to the Composition of Connacht in 1585 that Teige McRory of ‘Littermaoelin’ signed as a witness.147
No original version of the Composition manuscript survives, only an imperfect copy
made in 1700.148 In all probability Teige McRory is a scribal error, the original reading
being ‘Teige mcDory’ or ‘Teige McBrody’; as the original is now lost this cannot be
established beyond doubt. Lettermoylan is also recorded in an inquisition in 1619 where
‘Thady MacBrody’ (Tadhg mac Dáire) was empanelled as a juror.149
Clann Bhruaideadha estate
Landholding in 1615
A study of the landholding of Clann Bhruaideadha holds clues to their historical status
and position in Ibrickan. For example, the spatial relationship between Doonogan as their
142 Ainsworth (ed.), Inchiquin Manuscripts, p. 24. [no.71].
143 Simington, Books of Survey and Distribution, pp 541-2.
144 Literate members of Clann Bhruaideadha are frequently found in legal instruments in both the Inchiquin Manuscripts and
also in the collection of Irish deeds printed by James Hardiman. See Ainsworth (ed.,) Inchiquin Manuscripts [nos. 890;
920; 930; 936; 937; 964; 966; 975; 952; 980; 981; 984; 995; 999; 1003; 1008; 1011; 1018; 1021; 1025; 1029; 1030; 1044;
1318; 1321; 1344; 1483]; and Hardiman (ed.), ‘Ancient Irish Deeds’, pp 61, 67, 80, 81, 84.
145 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1599. Mac Bruaideadha attributed Ó Domhnaill’s incursion as revenge for the
demolition of Grianán Ailigh by the grandson of Brian Bóroimhe, and thereby ancestor of Donnchadh Ó Briain, fourth
Earl of Thomond, whose territory Ó Domhnaill raided.
146 Leerssen, Contention of the Bards, p. 45. See Tadhg mac Dáire’s poem Fóiridh mo leisge, a Leith Chuinn in L. Cionnaith,
(ed.), Dioghluim Dána, (Dublin, 1938) no. 95.
147 A. Martin Freeman, (ed.), The Compossicion Booke of Conought (Dublin, 1936) p. 7.
148 The author inspected this copy at the British Library and found the 1936 printed version an accurate transcription of the
c.1700 handwritten copy.
149 Cf. Lettermoelane in Petworth House Archive, MS B.26.T.16, [1 April 1619].
102
LUKE McINERNEY
towerhouse residence and the more ancient dwelling at Knockanalban on a crannóg, is
yet to be determined. The occupation of crannóg sites by learned families into early modern times is well known, as are the occupation of other traditional sites such as the caiseal
residence of the Uí Dhuibhdábhoireann brehons at Cahermacnaughten in Burren, and the
Meic Fhlannchadha brehons at Cahermaclanchy in Corcomroe. In some cases crannóg
sites were re-used early medieval royal residences and dynastic sites which had become
re-occupied by learned families in the later medieval period. Crannóg sites often represented symbolic, though archaic residences, relegating them to a secondary use by the
early modern period. Their sequested nature made them ideal for the storage of documents and as schools and guest-houses rather than permanent residences. At this period
the ollamh of the lineage occupied towerhouse residences in the manner of the ruling
Gaelic class.150
Around Slieve Callan various branches of Clann Bhruaideadha held land into the
seventeenth century. According to the 1615 ‘Survey of Ibrickan’151 and the 1626 rental of
the fifth Earl of Thomond’s estates,152 identification of Meic Bhruaideadha proprietors
shows that they had a strong presence in the barony. In 1615 Clann Bhruaideadha
occupied over 9,500 acres or around a fifth of Ibrickan barony.153 Their chief landholdings in 1615 included; Donnsallagh, Shanavogh, Doonogan and surrounding five
quarters,154 Shandrum and Moyglass, Cloghaunnatinny, and Knockanalban.155 In 1626 it
included: Lackamore, Kildeema,156 Shannaglas, Cahircolligan, Annagh, Knockanalban,
Carrowlagan and Ballymackea.157 It can be seen that their landholding coalesced around
Knockanalban and Doonogan in Ibrickan and on Slieve Callan at Lettermoylan.
The association between Clann Bhruaideadha and Slieve Callan can also be found in
a letter in Irish by Conchubhar Mac Bruaideadha and dated January 1631, written as an
introduction for the German settler Matthew de Renzy.158 The letter relates that when de
Renzy arrived in Ireland in 1606 he sought to learn Irish and, ‘in his journeying he came
across the family of Mac Bruaideadha, in particular Conchubhar Mac Bruaideadha, and
Tadhg mac Dáire, who were knowledgeable and very learned in Irish’.159 The letter is
headed, ‘Kl Ianuair for Satharn 1631 Callainn (The Kalends of January on Saturday
1631, Callan).160 We may posit that Callainn is Sliabh Calláin, identifying Conchubhar
Mac Bruaideadha’s residence at the time of writing. In 1636 Franciscan friar and scholar,
Micheál Ó Cléirigh, travelled throughout Ireland seeking approbations for his work
150 See, for example, the learned families of Co. Clare who possessed towerhouses in the sixteenth century such as the Ó
Catháin of Inis Cathaigh and Ballykett. Martin Breen, ‘A 1570 List of Castles in County Clare’, North Munster Antiquarian Journal, vol. xxxvi (1995) pp 130-8 and Twigge, ‘Edward White’s Description of Thomond in 1574’, pp 75-85.
151 Petworth House Archive, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
152 Petworth House Archive, ‘An abstract of such rents and renenewes as doe belonge to the right Hon. Henrye Earle of
Thomond [1626]’, Petworth House Archives, Chichester, MS No. C27/A 39.
153 Computed using modern townland approximations of 1615 denominations. Also see Petworth House Archives, MS
C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
154 According to the 1615 survey these included the five quarters of Carrowduff, Kildeema, Finnor More and Killargnayne
(Killernan?) (all spellings modernized). See Petworth House Archives, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
155 Petworth House Archive, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
156 The 1626 rental records that the five quarters of Kildeema and Finnor More were held by ‘Teig mc Brodie’s sonnes’.
157 Ibid.
158 Conchubhar did not inherit his father Maoilín Óg’s poetic mastery as can be seen in the short poem he included in the
letter to de Renzy which was not composed in the accomplished Dán Díreach style, characteristic of a bardic poet. Brian
Mac Cuarta, ‘Conchubhar Mac Bruaideadha and Sir Matthew de Renzy (1577-1634)’, Éigse, vol. 27 (1993) pp122-6:125
159 Ibid.
160 Ibid., p. 123.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
103
Annála Ríoghachta Éireann, during the course of which he obtained the signature of
Conchubhar Mac Bruaideadha. Conchubhar’s testimonium read:
Táinic an brathair bocht Michel O Clérigh (amaille le humhla a uachdaráin an
tathair loseph Euerard prouinsial uird S. Fr.) dom láthair do lécchadh 7 do thaisbénadh an leabhair airis 7 annáladha 5 do sgriobhadh lais 7 lasan aois ealadhna
oile isa lámha atá air 7 iar na fhéuchain 7 iar na hreathnucchadh dhamh, atúsa
Mac Bruaideadha (Conchobar mac Maoilin Oicc) Chill Chaoid[h]e 7 o Leitir
Mhaoláin i ccontae an Chláir aga fhiadhnachadh go bhfoil an leabar ionmholta 7
nach cumhain linn leabar airis, no annáladh dfaicsin as mo, as fearr 7 as
lionmhaire choitchinne ar Erinn uile iná an leabar so 7 gurab doiligh toibhéim,
lochdughadh, na increachadh do dhéunamh air. Do derbhadh ar a ndubhart atáim
ace cur mo láimhe air so i cCill Chaoid[h]e II Nouember 1636.
Conner Mac Brody da ngoirter
Mac Bruaideadha.
[Whereas the poor Friar Michel O Clérigh came into my presence (in obedience of
his superior, Father Joseph Everard, Provincial of the Order of St Francis) to show
me this book, together with other books; I am Mac Bruaideadha, Conchobhar son
of Maoilin Óg of Cill Chaoid[h]e [Kilkee] and Leitir Mhaoláin [Lettermoylan] in
the county of Clare, testifies that I have seen many books relating to the festivals
of the Irish saints, but never did see any one book of them so full, eminently
clear, and arranged in better order, and so worthy of praise as the Festival and
Martyrology which are in this book; and to attest this, I put my hand upon it in Cill
Chaoid[h]e [Kilkee], 11 November 1636.
Conner Mac Brody, who was proclaimed Mac Bruaideadha]161
Conchobhar’s residence can be identified as Cill Chaoid[h]e (Kilkee in Dysert parish)
and Leitir Maoláin (Lettermoylan, in Inagh parish). His proprietorship of Lettermoylan
descended to him from his father, Maoilín Óg. This was the same Conchubhar Mac
Bruaideadha who wrote the letter in 1631 in favour of Matthew de Renzy.
Conchobhar must have gained the appellation Mac Bruaideadha in the intervening
years after the death of his father Maoilín Óg in 1602, and when he helped arbitrate an
agreement between members of Clann Uí Mhaoil Dhomhnaigh and the Earl of Thomond
in 1606 for lands near Killaloe.162 The indenture to the agreement mentioned ‘Connor
McBrodyn otherwise McBrodye and Teig McBrodyn’ suggesting that Conchobhar was
the McBrodyn/Mac Bruaideadha by that stage.163 Conchobhar apparently died in 1642
and, we are informed, was in possession of Lettermoylan at the time of his death.164
161 Paul Walsh, Gleanings from Irish Manuscripts, (Dublin, 1933) p. 78. On the Meic Bhruaideadha and their relationship to
the compiling of the Annals of the Four Masters see Bernadette Cunningham, The Annals of the Four Masters: Irish
history, kingship and society in the early seventeenth century (Dublin, 2010) pp 278-98. On Kilkee towerhouse site in
Dysert and its possible occupation by Clann Bhruaideadha see See Risteárd Ua Cróinín & Martin Breen, ‘Some obscure
tower house sites in the Corofin area’, The Other Clare, vol. 17 (1993) pp 5-12:8, & note 35, p. 12.
162 See Petworth House Archive, MS C.13/34a, [23 September 1606]. The full indenture is printed in McInerney,
‘Documents from the Thomond Papers at Petworth House Archive’, p. 42.
163 This may have been a nominal title and it appears not linked to the ollamh-ship. That position effectively falling into
disuse on the death of Conchobhar’s father Maoilín Óg in 1602. Conchobhar also arbitrated a deed written in Irish in
1614. Gearóid Mac Niocaill, ‘Seven Irish Documents from the Inchiquin Archives’, Analecta Hibernica, no. 26 (1970)
pp 47-69:65.
164 O’Hart, Irish Pedigrees, p. 105. Also see Richard F. Cronnelly, Irish Family History: Being an Historical and
Genealogical Account of the Gaedhals from the Earliest Period to the Present Time (Dublin, 1864) p. 331.
104
LUKE McINERNEY
Leading kinsmen of Clann Bhruaideadha165
Diarmuid
Maoilín (ollamh to the Uí Chuinn of Cinéal Fearmhaic)
Diarmuid (d.1427)
Diarmuid
Maoilín (d.1438)
Seán (d.1518)
Diarmuid
Conchobhar (d.1531; ollamh to the Uí Chuinn)
?
Dáire Mac Bruaideadha + Finola Grajam166
?
Maoilín (ollamh)
(d.1582)
Bernard,168 Constantinus, Tadhg mac Dáire,169 Domhnall,170 Diarmuid,171 Bridget,172 Finola173
(d.1625/6)
Diarmuid167(ollamh)
(d.1563)
Gilla-Brighde (ollamh)
Lettermoylan, 1591
Maoilín Óg (ollamh)
(d.1602)
1586/1615: Knockanalban
1615: Doonogan
1614/1619: Lettermoylan
Milerus
Friar Antonius
(Prague, 1660s-70s)
Conchobhar (d.1642)
(1636 Lettermoylan/Kilkee)174
James/Jacob (Knockanalban)175
Daniel (c.1641)176
165 The names presented here are derived from O’Hart, Irish Pedigrees, pp 104-05 and references in Friar Antonius
Bruodinus’ work, written under pseudonym, O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici.
166 Read: ‘Darius Bruodinus, Dominus Montis Scoti, Balliscanlan, Balliogan, etc., Finolam Grajam, Donati de Balli An
Crow filiam in uxorem habuit, ex quibus multi egregij viri, & foeminae descenderunt’ [‘Darius Bruodinus, master of
Mount Scott, Balliscanlan, Balliogan, etc, took Finola Grajam, daughter of Donough of Ballyancrow, as a wife, and from
them descended numerous remarkable men and women’. Ibid., p. 124].
167 See Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1563.
168 O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, p. 124.
169 Tadhg mac Dáire wife was Anna Mohuny of Tuonafarna, she being of Clann Mhic Mhathghamhna, ibid., p. 124.
170 Domhnall mac Dáire composed the poem Ceolchair sin a chruit an riogh which was dedicated to the fourth Earl of
Thomond. Walsh, Gleanings from Irish Manuscripts, p. 111. Also see the ‘Daniel Bruodinus Darij secondus filius’ in
O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, p. 124.
171 See a deed in Irish dated 1592 and written at Maothail in Rath parish, Inchiquin, where one of the witnessses was
‘Diarmoid mac Dáire Mhic Bruaideadha’. The scribe of the deed was Ualgharg Mac Bruaideadha who is an otherwise
unknown kinsman. Mac Niocaill, ‘Seven Irish Documents from the Inchiquin Archives’, p. 53.
172 O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, p. 129. Bridget married Cornelius MacMohony of Tuonafarna.
173 Ibid.
174 Conchobhar’s daughter Elenor of ‘Kilky’ (Kilkee in Dysert) married Thadeus Mohony of Tuonafarna, ibid., p. 132
175 Ibid., pp 43, 125.
176 Several of Tadhg mac Dáire’s sons held the five quarters of Kildeema and Finnor More in 1626. See Petworth House
Archive, ‘An abstract of such rents and renenewes as doe belonge to the right Hon. Henrye Earle of Thomond [1626]’,
Petworth House Archives, Chichester, MS No. C27/A 39.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
105
Landholding, 1641
Various branches of Clann Bhruaideadha are recorded in the 1641 Books of Survey and
Distribution in Co. Clare. Meic Bhruaideadha kinsmen can be found holding land
at Inishcaltra, Dysert, Kilraghtis and Inchicronan parishes.177 Examining landholding
around Slieve Callan can ascertain Lettermoylan’s position as an estate of a leading
branch of Clann Bhruaideadha. In 1641 Meic Bhruaideadha kinsmen in Dysert parish
(now Inagh) held Cloonanaha to the north of Slieve Callan, and at Formoyle Upper and
Lower bordering Lettermoylan to the east.178 The cluster of kinsmen at Formoyle included the sons of Maoilín Óg and Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha, strongly intimating
that in Inagh parish was domiciled the leading branch of Clann Bhruaideadha.179 All these
lands were forfeited to the Earl of Inchiquin180 and in the words of antiquarian Dr George
Macnamara, the Meic Bhruaideadha proprietors were ‘unceremoniously evicted, and
their lands, though poor and unproductive, helped to fill the hungry maw of Morough the
Burner.181
In 1641 other lands held by Meic Bhruaideadha included the townlands of Kilkee and
Lisheenrahanick and Lisheencreevy in Dysert parish.182 The former of which was the
property of Conchobhar son of Maoilín Óg. As we have shown Kilkee (Cill Chaoidhe)
was where Conchobhar signed his approbation of Ó Cléirigh’s work in 1636; his other
property being Lettermoylan. This serves to highlight that the Clann Bhruaideadha
branch at Dysert had intertwined interests in Inagh parish. This rather innocuous point
owes itself to the fact that modern day Inagh parish once formed part of Dysert parish and
included Lettermoylan on its far western border.
In 1641 Lettermoylan was in the hands of the Bishop of Killaloe, undoubtedly because the oratory church of Mac Creiche designated it as church land. On Petty’s County
Map of 1685 Lettermoylan is marked to the west of ‘Formoyleighteragh’ (Formoyle
Lower) and next to a mountain, presumably Slieve Callan.
Petty’s Hiberniae Delineatio County Map (1685)
177 See proprietors listed under these parishes in Simington, Books of Survey and Distribution.
178 Ibid., pp 533-5.
179 The full recording including the townland sub-divisions are, for Formoyle Eighteragh: Daniel McBrody of Letterahoffe;
Conor McMoylin McBrody of Gortinterill and Cloonecolpa and Knockluoghra; Conor McDary McBrody of Derrynakilly and Clooneckiddle; Daniel McDaniel McBrody of Clooneckiddle; John McBarnard McBrody of Tirranskagh;
Luke McBrody of Knockluoghra. For Formoyle Oughteragh: James Oge McBrody of Lairheagh; Daniel McTeige
McBrody of Beanormollagh[?]. Simington, Books of Survey and Distribution, pp 534-5.
180 Ibid., pp 534-5.
181 Macnamara, ‘The O’Davorens of Cahermacnaughten, Burren, Co. Clare’, p. 75.
182 Simington, Books of Survey and Distribution, pp 553-4.
106
LUKE McINERNEY
Knockanalban estate
Knockanalban was one of the chief residences of Clann Bhruaideadha. The fact that
Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha occupied it since at least 1586 confirms this
view.183 Tadhg mac Dáire appears at Knockanalban again in 1602 when he was noted as a
‘gent’ in the same fiant that recorded a Shane mcBrian McBrody, yeoman of ‘Litternewlan’.184 Clearly this is a reference to Lettermoylan though Shane mcBrian is an otherwise
obscure kinsman. The 1615 survey of Ibrickan records Knockanalban rent free and that
‘Teig McBroady holdeth for which he payeth not rent’.185 Knockanalban was one of eight
quarters of Ibrickan that was exempt from paying [either] ‘hoggs nor muttons’.186 Knockanalban was still rent free in 1626 when the fifth Earl of Thomond’s rental listed its
occupant as ‘Teig mc Brodies widdowe’.187 This fact places Tadhg mac Dáire’s death
between 1624, when he composed an elegy on the death of the Earl of Thomond,188 and
1626.189 The legend that Tadhg mac Dáire was flung from the heights of Doonogan castle
by a rapacious Cromwellian in the 1650s is demonstrably untrue. Perhaps the myth had
its roots in Tadhg mac Dáire’s proprietorship of Doonogan instead; the story possibly
serving as an analogy of the dispossession of Clann Bhruaideadha in the Cromwellian
settlement or of some other violence directed against them.
Around Knockanalban and Doonogan Clann Bhruaideadha held their largest estates
in the early seventeenth-century.190 Knockanalban’s exemption from rent signified the
status of the Meic Bhruaideadha as official poet-chroniclers. According to Friar Antonius
Bruodinus, the professional reputation of Clann Bhruaideadha rested on several functions
including chronicling events and maintaining the genealogies of the nobility:
Inter Hibernos…(more omnium per Europam Nationum) sunt nobiles, nobiliores,
nobilissimi; divites, ditiores, ditissimi. Bruodinus non negavit; sed palam confessus est, suam familiam esse tantum nobilem, ex qua semper unus fuit familiae
caput, seu senior (vulgo MacBruodin dictus) cujus erat priscis Regnantibus,
Hibernis, inter alios Regni Chronologos historiam Regni scribere, genealogias, et
facta notabilia Principum O Brien et aliarum certarum magnatum familiarum
observare.191
[Among the Irish…(by the custom of Nations all through Europe) Bruodin did not
deny this [i.e. that there are several grades of nobility]; instead, he openly confessed that his family, which always brought forth one head of the family, or the
183 See The Irish Fiants of the Tudor Sovereigns During the Reigns of Henry VIII, Edward VI, Philip & Mary, and Elizabeth
I, Fiant, Eliz., No. 4860 [year 1586]. The reference reads ‘Teig Me Brodie, of Knockinalbie’.
184 Ibid, Fiant No. 6615 [year 1602].
185 Petworth House Archive, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
186 Ibid.
187 Petworth House Archive, ‘An abstract of such rents and renenewes as doe belonge to the right Hon. Henrye Earle of
Thomond [1626]’, Petworth House Archives, Chichester, MS No. C27/A 39.
188 See Ó Cuív, ‘An elegy on Donnchadh Ó Briain, fourth earl of Thomond’, pp 87-105.
189 Petworth House Archive, ‘An abstract of such rents and renenewes as doe belonge to the right Hon. Henrye Earle of
Thomond [1626]’, Petworth House Archives, Chichester, MS No. C27/A 39. The documentary evidence puts to rest the
remark by Theophilus O’Flanagan that Tadhg mac Dáire was hurled down from the summit of Doonogan to his death by
a Cromwellian in the 1650s. If it were true, he would have been very old at that time if we consider that he is recorded as
witnessing documents in the 1580s. See Theophilus O’Flanagan, Transactions of the Gaelic Society of Dublin, vol. 1
(1808) p. 27. O’Flanagan does relate that Tadhg mac Dáire, ‘possessed a fine appenage, as the hereditary PHILISOPHIC
[sic] BARD of Thomond (even in the decline of such establishments)—the castle of Dunogan, and its appurtenances’.
190 Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha may be considered a substantial landholder as his total landholding in 1615 was in
excess of seven quarters. See Petworth House Archives, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
191 O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, pp 40-1.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
107
senior (generally called MacBruodin), whose [task] it was when the Irish of old
reigned, to write, among other chroniclers of the realm, the history of the realm,
and to observe the genealogies, and the remarkable deeds of the O’Brien princes
and those of other certain great families].192
The fourth Earl of Thomond’s patronage of Clann Bhruaideadha extended to other
learned members such as Teig McBroody who was the rector of Bunratty (Tradery) prior
to 1612,193 and to Friar Dermot Bruodin, a member of the Slieve Callan branch and
educated in Spain.194 Friar Dermot Bruodin served as the guardian of Ennis Friary until
his death in 1617 and was accorded protection by the Earl (under the guise of being
‘mad’) and permitted to preach publicly in Ennis.195 He was also a recipient of a Spanish
pension in 1605 and was a follower of the Baron of Lixnaw during the Nine Years War.196
We may place some credence in Bruodinus’ writings and his authority extends to unraveling the landholding of Meic Bhruaideadha kinsmen. While too complicated to detail
here, aspects of his writing can be used to determine that the chief branches of the family
were located around Slieve Callan and Ibrickan.197
It is not known what purpose Knockanalban crannóg198 served but its sequestered
location and its symbolic reminder as an ‘antique residence’ may have been the reason of
its appeal for a learned family eager to impress their status and ancient credentials.
Alternatively, the defensive feature of a crannóg may have proven useful for the practical
purpose of storing documents and manuscripts. It is conceivable that Knockanalban had
several purposes, one of which was that of a manuscript library or archive. Its location on
an island surrounded by a watery marsh199 would also have made it an ideal venue in
which to conduct a school (sgoilteach) or keep a guest-house (teach n-oíged).
There are no contemporary references to a Meic Bhruaideadha school unlike the
Uí Dhuibhdábhoireann law school at Cahermacnaughten200 or the Uí Mhaoilchonaire
192 Author’s translation.
193 The advowson of the rectory had remained in the hands of the Uí Bhriain since the collapse of the Norman colony of
Tradraighe in c.1318. It is of no surprise that Earls of Thomond sought to appoint a member of Clann Bhruaideadha to
the rectory to serve the O’Brien household at Bunratty Castle. During the fifteenth century Meic Conmara clerics
monopolised appointments to the rectory. Perhaps the move by the fourth Earl of Thomond from Clonroad to Bunratty
encouraged a break from tradition and the appointment of a Mac Bruaideadha whose learning may have made him more
than just a cleric, but an advisor at Thomond’s court. We also read of a student cleric, Gillabride Broodin, who was
appointed to the rectories of Killuran and Kilseily in 1619 and appears in a Latin church document from 1621. Dwyer,
Diocese of Killaloe, pp 148-9; and Ainsworth (ed.), Inchiquin Manuscripts, p. 328. In another list Bishop Rider notes the
Catholic priest Donnell Broodin active in Killinaboy and Kilkeedy parishes in Inchiquin barony, ibid., p.144.
194 Antonius Bruodinus writes that: ‘Dermitius mac Bruodin, seu Bruodinus, Franciscani Ordinis inclytus opinion sanctitatis alumnus. Patrem habuit Milerum Bruodinum, Dominum montis Calany’ [Dermot MacBruodin or Bruodinus, of the
Franciscan Order of renowned sanctity. His father was Milerum Bruodinum, proprietor of Mount Callan]. Bruodinus,
Propugnaculum Catholicae Veritatis, p. 500. One wonders if he was the son of Maoilín (d.1582) or Maoilín Óg (d.1602)
as Milerum is used by Bruodinus as a Latinised form of Maoilín.
195 Ibid., pp 500-04. Bruodinus relates that in order for friar Dermot to not present a public threat to the English administration he did not shave his head or beard and wore a long dress to give the impression of a foolish eccentric. This was
a stratagem permitted by the Earl of Thomond to allow Dermot Bruodin to continue public ministry without suffering
prosecution.
196 Micheline Kerney Walsh, ‘O’Sullivan Beare in Spain: some unpublished documents’, Archivium Hibernicum, no. 45
(1990) pp 46-63:53,55. He is recorded therein as ‘Dermicio Brodino’ and was to receive 15 crowns.
197 See O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, pp 40-6, 109, 123-32.
198 See Gleeson, ‘Knockanalban crannog(s), Co. Clare’, pp 32-4. A possible second crannóg is identified at Knockanalban, a
point confirmed by the local landowner in July 2012.
199 The present landowner, James O’Boyle, informed the author in June 2012, that in former times the land around Knockanalban crannóg was much wetter than today, and formed a small lake. O’Boyle added that his father remembered the
land being drained and that the lake existed when the site was the property of Lord Leconfield.
200 See Macnamara, ‘The O’Davorens of Cahermacnaughten, Burren, Co. Clare’ (1912-13).
108
LUKE McINERNEY
school at Ardkyle near Bunratty.201 But it can be surmised that a school existed and it was
attended by Matthew de Renzy in the 1610s when he began to study Irish.202 Evidence
also exists that the Meic Bhruaideadha maintained links to other learned families who ran
schools, whether through their marriage ties with the Meic Fhlannchadha for example,203
or Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha’s poetic address to Clann Dhuibhdábhoireann
where he describes the ‘limewhite lios’ of Cahermacnaughten.204 The literary network of
Clann Bhruaideadha was extensive and connections were maintained as far afield as
Donegal from where a member of the learned Uí Chléirigh died while visiting Lettermoylan in 1595.205 Such allusions imply familiarity with the schools and residences of
other learned families. Residences of the Gaelic learned class served several purposes: a
storage place for official documents; a defensive residence for the ollamh and his kin; a
display of prestige; and in the case of residences attached to a school, a solitary place in
which to produce manuscripts.
One of the last known connections between Knockanalban and the Meic Bhruaideadha occurs at the time of the Irish Confederacy when ‘Gillebridy mc Brody’ (Giolla
Brighde) of Knockanalban was involved in an attack on English settler John Ward in
1642.206 By the mid-seventeenth century aristocratic patronage had almost disappeared
and few of the professional families continued to maintain schools and learning. From
around this time Clann Bhruaideadha virtually disappear from the historical record.
Doonogan estate
In 1615 Doonogan was owned by Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha.207 Doonogan
probably can be regarded as primus inter pares among Clann Bhruaideadha residences,
serving as a more conventional residence for Tadhg mac Dáire, although uncertainty
exists as to how long he held it. In 1835 Eugene Curry observed that the castle stood as a
ruin and local memory identified it as a Clann Bhruaideadha possession:
Dun Ógáin: castle partly ruined stands convenient to Milltown Malbay. It with its
appurtenances was the patrimony of the celebrated McBrodins. The last I believe
[of] whom was thrown down the steep precipice on which the castle stands, by one
of Cromwell’s soldiers.208
Today only scattered masonry abounds the site which commands an impressive view
over west Clare. Tadhg mac Dáire’s ownership of Doonogan, and the five quarters of land
in the surrounding vicinity along with a rent free estate at Knockanalban, unequivocally
201 On this family see Brian Ó Dálaigh, ‘The Uí Mhaoilchonaire of Thomond’, Studia Hibernica, xxxv (2009/2010),
pp 45-68.
202 Mac Cuarta, ‘Conchubhar Mac Bruaideadha and Sir Matthew de Renzy’, pp 122-6.
203 Various reference may be found in O’Mollony, Anatomicum Examen Enchiridii Apologettici, pp 124-132. Bruodinus lists
their marriage alliances with notable lineages such as the Meic Conmara, Meic Fhlannchadha and Uí Ghráda, among
others.
204 Macnamara, ‘The O’Davorens of Cahermacnaughten, Burren, Co. Clare’, (1912-13), p. 209.
205 Annals of the Four Masters, sub anno 1595.
206 Deposition of John Ward, TCD MS 829, fol. 80v, 25/4/1643.
207 Petworth House Archives, MS C.27.A.60, Ibrickan Survey [1615].
208 ‘Extract of a letter from Mr E. Curry to George Smith Esq. College Green, Dublin, dated at Limerick 8 July 1835’ (RIA,
‘Ordnance Survey Ireland: Co Clare Extracts’, vol 2, pp 510-11). I wish to thank Brian Ó Dálaigh for supplying this
reference.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
109
demonstrates his high status. We may therefore observe Lettermoylan as one linchpin in
a wider network of landholding that included Knockanalban and Doonogan, all of which
were corporate to the lineage.
Slieve Callan: a ritual landscape
There is little doubt that Slieve Callan and its environs constituted a ritual landscape that
extended north to the Burren. This landscape which has traces of human occupation that
stretch back to the megalithic also contains important medieval sites. These sites would
have served as ‘antique identifiers’ that help justify the landholding claims of members of
the learned class, including rent free lands. As Katherine Simms has pointed out, the
estates of the bardic poets were often located in areas with symbolic meaning, and that
sequestered sites were especially sought to convey a sense of retreat from the world and
where learning could be pursued. These sites were integrated into a territorial matrix that
often encompassed wilderness and natural beauty, along with productive grazing and
pasture land.209
Often the estates of the learned class were arranged near or on inauguration sites and
the mensal land of local dynasties. Such sites often coincided with anciently used places
of burial, monastic foundations and megalithic tombs. Many of these features are found
around Slieve Callan suggesting that the Clann Bhruaideadha estates were arranged
similarly. The solitary Ogham inscription of unknown antiquity on the southern slope of
Slieve Callan, and the now destroyed cromlech that situated next to Lough Boolynagreana,210 along with a megalithic tomb at Knockalassa, serve as examples.211 It might
also be relevant to note the folklore tradition that links the Ogham stone to the key of the
submerged city of Kilstephen (Cill Stíopháin) which was reputably hidden at the bottom
of Lough Boolynagreana;212 other variants place the key under the Ogham stone and
buried with Conán.213 Other ritual markers that are found on the Meic Bhruaideadha
estate include the oratory church at Lettermoylan near the present Mount Callan House,
and the status of the church land there constituting part of Dysert termon.214 The occupation of Knockanalban crannóg may also be seen in the same context; reoccupation of a
site of considerable antiquity would be congruent with a learned family wanting a symbolic link with a territory’s antiquities.
209 Katharine Simms, ‘References to landscape and economy in Irish bardic poetry’, in H.B. Clarke, J. Prunty & M.
Hennessy (eds), Surveying Ireland’s past: multidisciplinary essays in honour of Anngret Simms (Dublin, 2004) pp 14568:146.
210 MacNeill, Festival of Lughnasa, p. 197. The presence of the cromlech was recalled by Prof. Brian O’Looney who visited
the site in 1859.
211 According to Lewis’s Topographical Dictionary there existed two small wedge tombs in proximity to the one seen today
at Knockalassa and also the remains of a stone ráth. Samuel Lewis, A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland: (second
edition, London, 1837) p. 90.
212 Macnamara, ‘The O’Davorens of Cahermacnaughten, Burren, Co. Clare’, (1912-13), p. 153. Macnamara cogently noted
that the Ogham stone was close to where the ‘McBrodin family’ once lived and may be attributed to them as a scholastic
exercise, perhaps erected in commemoration of Conán. He considered that if such a tradition existed it was likely they
who were acquainted with early manuscripts and histories and had the wherewithal to inscribe archaic Ogham characters.
Ibid., p. 195.
213 On this view of the tradition see the letter written by E.W. Burton Esq., Clifden, dated April 1785 which relates local
traditions about an ‘enchanted key’ interred with Conán. The Dublin Philosophical Journal, and Scientific Review, May
1826, p. 144.
214 Edward Worth, Bishop of Killaloe (1660-1669), groups Lettermoylan as part of the termon of Dysert. See ‘MS 1777,
Typescript copy of a survey of lands in the diocese of Killaloe made for Bishop Worth, 1661’, transcribed by (Rev) James
B. Leslie, National Library of Ireland, 1936, pp 31-3.
110
LUKE McINERNEY
It may be significant that the Meic Bhruaideadha estate around Doonogan in Ibrickan
situated close to the medieval territorial boundary with Uí Chormaic, the demarcation of
which lay just east of Doolough. The allocation of lands to the professional class often
comprised boundary lands,215 a point that can also be seen in the location of church sites
and high status residences. Lettermoylan was located on the farthest western reaches of
termon Dysert bordering Kilmurry-Ibrickan parish. Estates located on the boundary
between territories served various functions including barriers of sanctuary and places of
assembly; and as can be observed with Lettermoylan were usually coterminous with
parochial and termon divisions. From this view the location of estates of the learned class
which often comprised termon land frequently coincided with territorial boundaries.
These factors cannot be discounted when considering Clann Bhruaideadha’s landholding.
Lettermoylan’s division into townlands
Little primary material is available for Lettermoylan during the eighteenth century; only
from the early nineteenth century does sufficient material exist. Slieve Callan is mentioned only in passing in a letter dating from around c.1699-1703 by Sir Donough O’Brien of
Dromoland regarding allegations that he was a Jacobite sympathizer.216 Records are silent
on further references to the district until the mid-eighteenth century when Lettermoylan
was let by the Right Rev. Nicholas Synge, Bishop of Killaloe, (1746-1771) to his grandson George Synge of Rathmore in King’s County.217 In 1844 George Synge’s son Lt. Col.
Charles Synge, built a small house known as the ‘The Court’ at Lettermoylan (now
Ballynoe).218 According to the will of Lt. Col. Charles Synge who died in 1854, Lettermoylan passed into the proprietorship of the Synge family sometime before that time:
I own and am possessed of the four known [sic] as the four plough lands of
Lettermoylan Mount Callan in the barony of Inchiquin and Co. Clare held under
lease from the Bishop of Killaloe and the inheritance having been purchased and
from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners of Ireland.219
Mount Callan House was built on the site of ‘The Court’ in 1874 by a relative also
named Col. George Charles Synge. The house and property went to the inheritance of
the Tottenham family in 1891, and has remained in the possession of that family to the
present day. The division of Lettermoylan into townlands occurred after it was surveyed
and mapped in July 1842.220 The map shows how Lettermoylan was divided and
parceled, and assigned to smaller denominations.
215 On boundary association see Pádraig Ó Riain, ‘Boundary association in early Irish society’, Studia Celtica, vol. 7 (1972)
pp 12-29.
216 The letter mentions Cloonanaha; ‘Cluonehaha...there is a little patch of mountain near Sliewcallane’, see Ainsworth,
Inchiquin Manuscripts, p. 270 [no. 882].
217 After 1634 the leasing of church lands was restricted to 21 years at not less than half ‘the true value’ (i.e the market rent).
Many bishops circumvented this restriction by issuing a new lease every year at a renewal fine, resulting in much of the
bishops’ income being derived from renewal fines. Examples exist of Church of Ireland bishops making long term leases
of church land to their children, such as Archbishop Charles Agar of Cashel. I thank Kenneth Nicholls for his advice on
this point.
218 Anonymous, (ed.), ‘Mount Callan House and estate—an extract from the diary of Colonel George Charles Synge’, Dal
gCais, vol. 5 (1979) pp 94-100:94.
219 The author wishes to thank Jane Tottenham of Mount Callan House for providing the will for inspection.
220 ‘Map and survey of Lettermoylan as now divided for the Messrs. Synge... situate in the barony of Inchiquin, Co. Clare.
Surveyed by Michael and Peter O’Loghlin. Folio sheet vellum, coloured, July, 1842’ (National Library of Ireland,
Manuscript Map: 21 F. 75 (1).
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
111
‘Map and survey of Lettermoylan as now divided for the Messrs. Synge’…, July, 1842
From this map it can be seen that Lettermoylan comprised 1,833 acres and, judging from
the townlands that bounded the area, it encompassed much of present day Ballynoe,
Glennageer, Magherabaun and Knockalassa.221 Further proof that Lettermoylan was
originally joined with Glennageer and neighbouring townlands may be obtained in the
Ordnance Survey Name Books, (1840-42) which categorically show that Lettermoylan
and Glennageer constituted one land unit, though the former was by that time part of an
enlargened Glennageer:
Glannager (Gleann na g-caor, valley of the berries) townland property of Edward
Synge Esq. It consists chiefly of mountain pasture and bog with different stripes of
arable and tillage interspersed there throughout. A road also runs along its S.E
boundary. Names in this townland – Subdivision Lettermoylan, Lough Boolynagreena, Lackcommane, Commanes, Knock[?], Cullane, Mount Callan or Slieve
Callane.222
221 The modern size of these townlands is: Ballynoe (524 acres); Glennageer (844 acres); Magherabaun (624 acres) and
Knockalassa (935 acres). In total these townlands comprise 2,927 acres.
222 Ordnance Survey Name Books, Co. Clare, 1840-2.
112
LUKE McINERNEY
Lettermoylan does not feature by the time of the Griffith Valuation in 1855.223 By the
1870s the Synge estate at Slieve Callan consisted of 2,940 acres, much of it comprised
the divisions of Lettermoylan: i.e. Ballynoe, Glennageer, Magherabaun and Knockalassa.
Concluding Remarks
Lettermoylan of Clann Bhruaideadha was located on the eastern slope of Slieve Callan.
Encompassing much of modern-day Ballynoe and Glennageer, as well as Knockalassa
and Magherabaun, Lettermoylan existed as a townland until the 1840s. Historically
Lettermoylan constituted episcopal mensal land and was located on the western border of
termon Dysert. It is curious that Clann Bhruaideadha were ecclesiastical tenants both at
Lettermoylan and at Moynoe in east Co. Clare where a branch of the family pursued
native learning. These facts may support the view that Clann Bhruaideadha shared, along
with other members of the Gaelic learned orders, a pre-reform connection to the Irish
monastic church. This would account for them being settled on church land and being a
literati lineage.
The Meic Bhruaideadha chronicler-poets did not leave us with a genealogy documenting their history; instead we are left with the imprint of their literature in bardic
poetry and the physical remains of their residences at Knockanalban crannóg and
Doonogan towerhouse. We are also reminded of their former presence by the ruined
foundation of the oratory church of Mac Creiche, which can be seen perched above the
stream that flows down the Leitir of Slieve Callan.
Appendix One
Calendar of entries relating to Lettermoylan
c.1580
1585
1591
1592
1602
1614
1617
1618
1619
1621
1636
Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha’s poem to the Clanrickard Bourkes.
Teige McRory [recte McDary/macDáire?] of ‘Littermaoelin’ witness to the Composition of Connacht.
Pardon issued to ‘Gilabride Mc Brodyne, of Letter Mellane’.
Maccon Ó Cléirigh, ollamh to Ó Domhnall died while visiting ‘Leitir-Maelain’ in
Thomond.
Pardon issued to ‘Shane mcBrien Mc Brody, of Litternewlan yeoman’.
Bishop of Killaloe’s petition to the Lord Deputy mentions ‘houses and mancons [sic]
within the half quarter of land called Littermolane within the parish of Dysert’.
Teige McBroodyn and Gillibride McBroodyn released to the Bishop of Killaloe
Lettermoylan.
Great Office Inquisition for Inchiquin records Teig McBrodin of ‘Lettermollan’
and Bernard McBrodin of ‘Lettermollan’ (with a strike through it and substitutes
‘Sonnagh’).
‘Thady Mac Brody de Lettermoelane’ in the inquisition into the lands of Donough
O’Brien, fourth Earl of Thomond.
Great Office Inquisition for Inchiquin, Teig McBrodin as a juror and of ‘Lettermollan’.
Conchobhar Mac Bruaideadha, son of Maoilín Óg of Chill Chaoid[h]e and Leitir
Mhaoláin.
223 Griffith Valuation of Ireland, 1855, Parish of Inagh.
LETTERMOYLAN OF CLANN BHRUAIDEADHA
1641
1685
1689
113
Littermoylan recorded as bishopric land in the Books of Survey and Distribution.
Letermoleane appears on Petty’s County Map of 1685.
John Roane, Bishop of Killaloe’s letter to Sir Donat O’Brien which mentions ‘Lyttermoylane’.
1740s-50s Lettermoylan let on a 999 years lease by the Right Rev. Nicholas Synge, Bishop of
Killaloe, (1746-1752) to his grandson, George Synge.
1842
Lettermoylan mapped for Lt. Col. Charles Synge and surveyed as consisting 1,833
acres.
1843
Lettermoylan appears in the Tithe Applotment Books for Inagh parish under the designation ‘Lettermoylan Glaumageer’ (recte Glanagee).
1844
Lt. Col. Charles Synge, erected a house known as the ‘The Court’ with a slate roof at
Lettermoylan.
1855
Lettermoylan falls into disuse as a land denomination and is subsumed by the
denominations Glennageer and Ballynoe which are instead recorded in the Griffith
Valuation.
1874
Colonel George Charles Synge builds Mount Callan House on the site of ‘The Court’.
Appendix Two
Parishes associated with Clann Bhruaideadha
Inagh Parish
Kilmurry-Ibrickan Parish
Dysert Parish
Moynoe parish