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Armagh

Armagh (/ɑːrˈmɑː/ ar-MAH; Irish: Ard Mhacha, IPA: [ˌaːɾˠd̪ˠ ˈwaxə], "Macha's height"[3]) is the county town of County Armagh and a city in Northern Ireland, as well as a civil parish. It is the ecclesiastical capital of Ireland – the seat of the Archbishops of Armagh, the Primates of All Ireland for both the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of Ireland. In ancient times, nearby Navan Fort (Eamhain Mhacha) was a pagan ceremonial site and one of the great royal capitals of Gaelic Ireland. Today, Armagh is home to two cathedrals (both named after Saint Patrick) and the Armagh Observatory, and is known for its Georgian architecture.

Armagh
Location within Northern Ireland
Population16,310 (2021 Census)
Irish grid referenceH876455
• Belfast33 mi (53 km)
District
County
CountryNorthern Ireland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townARMAGH
Postcode districtBT60, BT61
Dialling code028
UK Parliament
NI Assembly
Website
List of places
UK
Northern Ireland
Armagh
54°21′00″N 6°39′17″W / 54.3499°N 6.6546°W / 54.3499; -6.6546

Although classed as a medium-sized town,[4] Armagh was given city status in 1994 and Lord Mayoralty status in 2012, both by Elizabeth II. It had a population of 16,310 people in the 2021 Census.[5]

History edit

 
St. Patrick's Cathedral, Armagh (Church of Ireland), site of the original church
 
Scotch Street, c. 1900
 
Open-air market on Market Street

Foundation edit

Eamhain Mhacha (or Navan Fort), at the western edge of Armagh, was an ancient pagan ritual or ceremonial site. According to Irish mythology it was one of the great royal sites of Gaelic Ireland and the capital of Ulster. It appears to have been largely abandoned after the 1st century. In the 3rd century, a ditch and bank was dug around the top of Cathedral Hill, the heart of what is now Armagh. Its circular shape matches the modern street layout. Evidence suggests that it was a pagan sanctuary and the successor to Navan.[6] Like Navan, it too was named after the goddess Macha: Ard Mhacha, meaning "Macha's height". This name was later anglicised as Ardmagh,[7][8] which eventually became Armagh. Navan and Armagh were linked by an ancient road which passes over Mullacreevie hill.[9]

After Christianity spread to Ireland, the pagan sanctuary was converted into a Christian one, and Armagh became the site of an important church and monastery. According to tradition, Saint Patrick founded his main church there in the year 445, and it eventually became the head church of Ireland. Muirchú writes that a pagan chieftain named Dáire would not let Patrick build a church on the hill of Ard Mhacha, but instead gave him lower ground to the east. One day, Dáire's horses died after grazing on the church land. He told his men to kill Patrick, but was himself struck down with illness. They begged Patrick to heal him, and Patrick's holy water revived both Dáire and his horses. Dáire rewarded Patrick with a great bronze cauldron and gave him the hill of Ard Mhacha to build a church. Dáire has similarities with the Irish god the Dagda.[10]

Medieval era edit

By the 7th century, Armagh had become the site of the most important church, monastery and monastic school in the north of Ireland.[11] The Book of Armagh was produced in the monastery in the early 9th century and contains some of the oldest surviving specimens of Old Irish.

Armagh was at the heart of the kingdom of the Airthir, a part of the Airgíalla federation. The church at Armagh looked to both the Airthir and neighbouring Uí Néill for patronage.[11] The Uí Néill High King, Niall Caille (Niall of the Callan), was buried at Armagh in 846 after drowning in the River Callan. His son, High King Áed Findliath, had a house at Armagh.[11]

The first Viking raids on Armagh were recorded in 832, with three in one month,[12] and it suffered at least ten Viking raids over the following century. A hoard seemingly lost by Vikings in the River Blackwater shows the high quality of metalwork being made in Armagh at this time.[11]

Brian Boru, High King of Ireland, visited Armagh in 1004, acknowledging it as the head church of Ireland and bestowing it a large sum of gold. Brian was buried at Armagh cathedral after his death at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014.[13] Armagh's claim to being the head church of Ireland was formally acknowledged at the Synod of Ráth Breasail in 1111.[11] All English slaves in the island freed by the Council of Armagh.[14]

Following the Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland, Armagh was attacked by Anglo-Normans led by Philip de Worcester in 1185 and by John de Courcy in 1189.[15] It was also raided by Ruaidrí mac Duinn Sléibe of Ulaid in 1196 and 1199.[16]

Archbishop Máel Patraic Ua Scannail rebuilt Armagh cathedral in 1268 and founded a Franciscan friary, whose remains can still be seen. There was also a small Culdee community in Armagh until the 16th century.[11]

Early modern era edit

During the 16th century Tudor conquest of Ireland, Armagh suffered greatly in the conflict between the English and the O'Neills. Armagh was strategically important as it lay between the English Pale and the O'Neill heartland of Tyrone, and the town changed hands many times during the wars.[17] In the 1560s, English troops under Thomas Radclyffe occupied and fortified the town, which was then attacked and largely destroyed by Shane O'Neill. After the Battle of the Yellow Ford in 1598, the routed English army took refuge at Armagh before surrendering to Hugh O'Neill.[17] By the end of the Nine Years' War, Armagh lay in ruins, as shown on Richard Bartlett's 1601 map.[11]

Following the Nine Years' War, Armagh came under English dominance and the cathedral came under the control of the Protestant Church of Ireland. The cathedral was rebuilt under Archbishop Christopher Hampton and the town began to be settled by Protestants from Britain, as part of the Plantation of Ulster. During the Irish Rebellion of 1641, many British settlers fled to Armagh cathedral for safety. After negotiations with the besieged settlers, Catholic rebels under Felim O'Neill occupied the town. In May 1642, following several rebel defeats and massacres by settlers elsewhere, the rebels in Armagh seized the settlers' property and set fire to the town.[18]

Modern era edit

The parliamentary borough of Armagh was a two-seat constituency in the Irish House of Commons prior to 1801. It continued as a one-seat constituency in the United Kingdom House of Commons from 1801 to 1885. It had a municipal corporation which was abolished under the Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840.

Armagh has been an educational centre since the time of Saint Patrick, and thus it has been referred to as "the city of saints and scholars". The educational tradition continued with the foundation of the Royal School in 1608, St Patrick's College in 1834 and the Armagh Observatory in 1790. The Observatory was part of Archbishop Lord Rokeby's plan to have a university in the city. This ambition was finally fulfilled, albeit briefly, in the 1990s when Queen's University of Belfast opened an outreach centre in the former hospital building.

The Catch-my-Pal Protestant Total Abstinence Union was founded in 1909 in Armagh by the minister of 3rd Armagh (now The Mall) Presbyterian Church, Rev. Robert Patterson. Although relatively short-lived it was very successful for that time, attracting many tens of thousands of members. It was influential in the development of a "two-community" narrative in Ulster which was important in the Ulster Unionist campaign during the Home Rule Crisis. A blue plaque historical marker commemorating Rev. Patterson was erected on The Mall in 2019.

Three brothers from Armagh died at the Battle of the Somme during World War I. None of the three has a known grave and all are commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial to the Missing of the Somme. A fourth brother was wounded in the same attack.

On 14 January 1921, during the Irish War of Independence, a Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) sergeant was assassinated by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in Armagh. He was attacked with a grenade as he walked along Market Street and later died of his wounds.[19] On 4 September 1921, republican leaders Michael Collins and Eoin O'Duffy addressed a large meeting in Armagh, which was attended by up to 10,000 people.[20]

During the Troubles in Armagh, the violence was substantial enough for a stretch of road on the outskirts of the city to be referred to by one RUC officer as "Murder Mile".[21] Over the span of 36 years, although mainly concentrated in the years from 1969 until 1994, the small city, including some outlying areas, saw 86 deaths in the Troubles, including those of a number of people from the city who died elsewhere in Troubles-related incidents. Armagh City Hall, which had been built as the Tontine Buildings in 1828[22] and converted into a municipal building in 1910,[23] was badly damaged in a bomb attack on 27 September 1972[24] and subsequently demolished.[25]

City status edit

As the seat of the Primate of All Ireland, Armagh was historically regarded as a city, and recognisably had the status by 1226.[26] It had no charter granted but claimed the title by prescription; Acts of the Parliament of Ireland in 1773 and 1791 refer to the "City of Armagh".[27] Armagh lost the status with the abolition of its city corporation by the Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840 after it was deemed ineffective and unrepresentative of its population. From 1953, Armagh began to argue for the restoration of the status lost in 1840,[28] with several applications to the Home Office being made.[29] The council used the appellation "city" unofficially until 1994 when, at Queen Elizabeth's personal request,[29] Armagh along with the Welsh town of St Davids was awarded the status. Charles, Prince of Wales during a visit in July 1994 announced it had been granted to mark the 1,550th anniversary of the traditional date of Armagh's foundation by Saint Patrick,[26] and also "in recognition of [Armagh's and St Davids'] important Christian heritage and their status as cities in the last century".[30]

The award of city status is typically granted to a local authority body, and the letters patent was initially presented to dignitaries and Armagh District Council by Queen Elizabeth during a visit on 9 March 1995.[31] Following this, it was renamed Armagh City and District Council from 1 October 1995.[32] Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council presently holds the status on behalf of the city as there is no localised council body since the aforementioned districts were merged in 2015 as a result of local government reform. Armagh contains the lowest population of all the cities of Northern Ireland, and is fifth smallest in the UK. Its urban area covering 3.97 sq mi (10.3 km2), makes it the smallest city by size in Northern Ireland, however several other cities are smaller when the UK is taken as a whole.

Notable buildings edit

 
St. Patrick's Cathedral, Armagh (Roman Catholic)

Armagh is the site of two cathedrals, both on hills and both named after Saint Patrick. The Church of Ireland cathedral dates back to around 445. The present-day, post-Reformation, Roman Catholic cathedral was constructed during the latter half of the 19th century and features twin 64m spires, making it the tallest such structure in the county. Armagh is one of the few cities in the world that is home to two cathedrals of the same name.

Armagh has a Georgian area of heritage importance. Perhaps one of the more well known of the buildings is the former women's prison.[33] The construction of Armagh Gaol began in 1780 and was extended in the 1840s and 1850s. The front façade of the prison was built in the Georgian style, while the later development, based on the design of Pentonville (HM Prison), is Victorian.[33] For most of its working life it was a women's prison although not exclusively so. Armagh Gaol was the primary women's prison in Northern Ireland. In 1986 the prison closed and its prisoners were transferred to the new prison at Maghaberry.[33]

The city is home to the Armagh Observatory, founded in 1790, and to the Armagh Planetarium, established in 1968 to complement the research work of the Observatory. The palace of the Archbishop of Armagh is now the local council offices and, along with the archbishop's private chapel, is open to the public. The Palace Stables heritage centre is a reconstructed stable block dating from the 18th century, which was once part of the Archbishop's estate.

Among the city's chief glories is Armagh Public Library on Abbey Street. It was founded in 1771 by Archbishop Richard Robinson (later created the first Baron Rokeby in 1777), using his own library as its nucleus.[34] It is especially rich in 17th- and 18th-century books in English, including Dean Jonathan Swift's own copy of the first edition of his Gulliver's Travels with his manuscript corrections.

Armagh Market House was built in 1815 as a two-storey five-bay building, and is currently used as a library.

Armagh County Museum is the oldest county museum in Ireland.[35] The building dates from 1833 and was originally a school house. It was opened as the in 1937.

Townlands edit

 
Armagh showing townlands
  Corporation townland
  Other townlands
  Built-up area
  Countryside
  Greenfield land

Armagh is within the civil parish of Armagh. Like the rest of Ireland, this parish is divided into townlands, whose names mostly come from the Irish language. When these townlands were built upon, they lent their names to various streets, roads and housing estates. In 1830, most of Armagh's urban townlands were amalgamated for administration and became known as Corporation Lands or simply Corporation.[36] The surrounding townlands remained as separate units and they were eventually built upon too. They are listed below alongside their likely etymologies.[7][37]

  • Aghamoat (from Irish Achadh Mochta 'Mochta's field')
  • Ballynahone More (from Baile na hAbhann, "townland of the river")
  • Cargagh (from Cairgeach, "rocky land")
  • Cavanacaw (from Cabhán an Chatha, "hollow of the battle" or Cabhán na Cáithe, "hollow of the chaff")
  • Drumadd (formerly Drumadokeenan, from Dromad Uí Chianáin, "O'Keenan's ridge")
  • Drumarg (from Droim Mairge, "ridge of the boundary")
  • Drumman More (from Dromann, "the ridge")
  • Killuney (from Cill Liamhna, "Liamhain's church")
  • Legarhill or Mullaghcreevie (from Mullach Craoibhe, "hilltop of the branch"; legar is from an old English word for a military camp)
  • Longstone (named after a standing stone)
  • Lurgyvallen (from Lorga Uí Mhealláin, "O'Mallon's long low ridge")
  • Mullynure (from Mullach an Iúir, "hilltop of the yew") – part of Grange parish
  • Parkmore (from Páirc Mhór, "great field")
  • Tullyelmer (originally Tullyelmaine, possibly from Tulaigh Alúine, "hillock of the yellow clay")
  • Umgola (from Iomghuala, "hill-shoulder")

Some of the former townlands included:

  • Doonullagh (possibly from Dún Ulaidhe, "fort of the tomb")[38]
  • Drumbreda (from Droim Brighde, "Brigid's hill")[39]
  • Knockadrain (from Cnoc an Droighin, "blackthorn hill") – site of the Catholic cathedral[40]
  • Knockamell (from Cnoc Uí Ághmaill, "O'Hamill's hill") – site of the Observatory[39]
  • Knockenboy (from Cnocán Buidhe, "yellow hillock")[38]
  • Lisanally (formerly Liosconalia, from Lios Chon Allaidh meaning "fort of the wolf"; "Cú Allaidh's fort")[39]
  • Tullynalecky (from Tulaigh na Leice, "flagstone hill") – site of St Patrick's Catholic graveyard[41]
  • Templebreed (from Teampall Brighde, "Brigid's chapel")
  • Templefertagh (from Teampall Fearta, "chapel of the graves or miracles")
  • Tullyasnagh[38]

Demography edit

National Identity of Armagh residents (2021)
Nationality Per cent
Irish
47.9%
Northern Irish
24.1%
British
20.2%

2021 Census edit

On Census day (21 March 2021) there were 16,310 people living in Armagh.[5] Of these:

  • 67.3% (10,977) belong to or were brought up in the Catholic Christian faith and 23.76% (3,875) belong to or were brought up in a 'Protestant and Other Christian (including Christian related)' religion. 1.35% belong to other religions and 7.59% have no religious background.
  • 47.93% had an Irish national identity,[42] 20.17% indicated that they had a British national identity[43] and 24.08% had a Northern Irish national identity[44] (respondents could indicate more than one national identity).

2011 Census edit

On Census day (27 March 2011) there were 14,777 people living in Armagh (5871 households), accounting for 0.82% of the NI total,[45] representing an increase of 1.3% on the Census 2001 population of 14,590.[46] Of these:

  • 20.90% were aged under 16 years and 15.44% were aged 65 and over.
  • 52.52% of the usually resident population were female and 47.48% were male.
  • 68.85% belong to or were brought up in the Catholic Christian faith and 26.95% belong to or were brought up in a 'Protestant and Other Christian (including Christian related)' religion.
  • 44.39% had an Irish national identity, 27.18% indicated that they had a British national identity and 26.43% had a Northern Irish national identity (respondents could indicate more than one national identity).
  • 37 years was the average (median) age of the population;
  • 18.76% had some knowledge of Irish (Gaelic) and 4.08% had some knowledge of Ulster-Scots.

Governance edit

Armagh City and District Council was a single district council until 2015 when it merged with Banbridge District Council and Craigavon Borough Council under local government reorganisation in Northern Ireland to become Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council, sometimes colloquially referred to as the ABC council.

Armagh is part of the Newry and Armagh Assembly constituency.

Together with part of the district of Newry and Mourne, it forms the Newry & Armagh constituency for elections to the Westminster Parliament and Northern Ireland Assembly.

Administration edit

 
Former houses on Charlemont Place, beside The Mall, now occupied by Education Authority (Southern)

The Education Authority (Southern) and the Southern Health and Social Care Trust[47] have their headquarters in the city, which has a long reputation as an administrative centre.

The secretariat of the North/South Ministerial Council is based in Armagh, and consists jointly of members of the civil services of both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

Armagh is the seat of both the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh and the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh, both of whom hold the position of Primate of All Ireland for their respective denominations.

Education edit

Primary edit

  • Armstrong Primary School
  • Christian Brothers Primary School Armagh
  • The Drelincourt Primary School
  • Dromintee Primary School
  • Drumhillery Primary School
  • Mount St Catherine's Primary School
  • The Royal School Preparatory School
  • Saints and Scholars Integrated Primary School
  • St. Malachy's Primary School
  • St. Patrick's Primary School

Post-primary edit

Transport edit

The Ulster Railway linked Armagh with Belfast in 1848 and Monaghan in 1858.[49] The Newry and Armagh Railway (N&A) opened in 1864 and the Castleblayney, Keady and Armagh Railway (CK&A) was completed in 1910.[49] In 1876 the Ulster Railway became part of the new Great Northern Railway (GNR), which took over the N&A in 1879 and the CK&A in 1911.[50]

The Armagh rail disaster, which killed 80 people, occurred on 12 June 1889 on the N&A line near Armagh.[51][52]

The partition of Ireland in 1922 hastened the railways' decline, and the GNR closed the Keady – Castleblayney section of the CKA in 1923.[53] The GNR withdrew passenger trains from the Armagh – Keady section of the CKA in 1922 and closed the Armagh – Markethill section of the N&A in 1933.[53] The Government of Northern Ireland forced the GNR Board to close all remaining lines serving Armagh railway station on 1 October 1957: the goods branch from Armagh to Keady and the main line through Armagh from Portadown as far as the border at Glaslough on the way to Monaghan.[53][54]

Northern Ireland Railways train services run from Portadown to Belfast Great Victoria Street and the cross-border Enterprise service runs via Newry to Dublin Connolly. Poyntzpass also has a limited service.

When he was Minister for the Department for Regional Development, then MLA Danny Kennedy had indicated plans to restore the railway from Armagh station to Portadown.[55]

Sport edit

 
Armagh's Mall is home to the Armagh Cricket Club, and has also staged international matches.

Armagh City Football Club, which plays in the NIFL Championship is the main association football club, and the City of Armagh Rugby Club is the local rugby club. Lisanally Rangers F.C. is another football team, playing in the Mid-Ulster Football League. Gaelic football is represented by Armagh Harps and Pearse Ógs. The local GAA handball club is Eugene Quinn's, named after a player from the Armagh area who died on an attempted swim from Tory Island to the coast of Donegal. The local hurling club is Armagh Cúchulainns.

In 2004 the Royal School, Armagh became only the second team in history to win both the schools' rugby and hockey cups in the same year.

The Mall in Armagh has a long association with cricket, and is the location of the Armagh Cricket Club clubhouse.

Armagh Athletics Club was founded in 1969. The club organises the Armagh International 5k Road Race annually. The race was first organised in 1980 and takes place every February with athletes coming from England, Scotland, Wales, continental Europe and the United States.

Notable people edit

Only people who are sufficiently notable to have individual entries on Wikipedia have been included in the list and, in each instance, their birth or residence has been verified by citations.

Climate edit

Armagh has a temperate maritime climate (Cfb) according to the Köppen climate classification system. The nearest Met Office standard weather station, at Armagh Observatory, provides long term weather data back to 1794.[71][72] The lowest temperature was −15.0 °C (5.0 °F) on 7 February 1895. This is also the coldest temperature on record for February in Northern Ireland.[73][74] Armagh also holds the record for highest daily minimum temperature in Northern Ireland, at 20.6 °C (69.1 °F) on 31 July 1868.[74] The lowest daily maximum temperature on record is −8.0 °C (17.6 °F) which occurred on 20 December 2010.[75]

Typically, the warmest day of the year will reach 26.1 °C (79.0 °F),[76] and 3.7 days a year should attain a maximum temperature of 25.1 °C (77.2 °F) or above.[77]

Typically the coldest night of the year should fall to −6.8 °C (19.8 °F)[78] and 40.4 nights should register an air frost.[79] All averages refer to the 1981–2010 observation period.

Climate data for Armagh, elevation: 42 m (138 ft), 1981–2010 normals, extremes 1844–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 15.7
(60.3)
17.1
(62.8)
21.8
(71.2)
22.6
(72.7)
26.2
(79.2)
30.4
(86.7)
31.4
(88.5)
29.4
(84.9)
27.6
(81.7)
22.7
(72.9)
16.8
(62.2)
16.6
(61.9)
31.4
(88.5)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 7.4
(45.3)
8.1
(46.6)
10.2
(50.4)
12.6
(54.7)
15.6
(60.1)
18.0
(64.4)
19.7
(67.5)
19.3
(66.7)
16.9
(62.4)
13.4
(56.1)
10.0
(50.0)
7.7
(45.9)
13.3
(55.9)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.7
(40.5)
4.9
(40.8)
6.7
(44.1)
8.5
(47.3)
11.2
(52.2)
13.8
(56.8)
15.7
(60.3)
15.4
(59.7)
13.2
(55.8)
10.1
(50.2)
7.0
(44.6)
4.9
(40.8)
9.6
(49.3)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 1.9
(35.4)
1.6
(34.9)
3.1
(37.6)
4.3
(39.7)
6.7
(44.1)
9.6
(49.3)
11.7
(53.1)
11.4
(52.5)
9.5
(49.1)
6.8
(44.2)
3.9
(39.0)
2.1
(35.8)
6.1
(43.0)
Record low °C (°F) −14.3
(6.3)
−15.0
(5.0)
−12.4
(9.7)
−7.1
(19.2)
−2.3
(27.9)
0.8
(33.4)
0.0
(32.0)
2.3
(36.1)
−0.6
(30.9)
−5.6
(21.9)
−8.3
(17.1)
−14.6
(5.7)
−15.0
(5.0)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 74.5
(2.93)
54.0
(2.13)
65.6
(2.58)
57.6
(2.27)
57.8
(2.28)
58.4
(2.30)
62.7
(2.47)
76.3
(3.00)
68.1
(2.68)
85.5
(3.37)
74.6
(2.94)
77.1
(3.04)
812.3
(31.98)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 14.3 11.0 13.3 11.6 11.8 10.9 11.7 13.0 12.2 13.7 13.6 13.3 150.3
Mean monthly sunshine hours 46.4 69.0 96.6 142.6 173.5 144.2 137.0 133.3 113.9 90.2 58.5 40.3 1,245.5
Source 1: Met Office[80]
Source 2: AOMD[81] Belfast Telegraph (July record high)[82]

Annalistic references edit

 
The remains of Armagh's Franciscan friary

See Annals of Inisfallen (AI)

  • AI715.2 Flann.Febla, abbot of Ard Macha, rested.
  • AI729.1 Kl. Repose of Suibne, abbot of Ard Macha.
  • AI750.1 Kl. Repose of Congus, abbot of Ard Macha.
  • AI768.3 Repose of Feradach son of Suibne, abbot of Ard Macha.
  • AI772.2 Suibne, abbot of Ard Macha, [rested].
  • AI791.1 Kl. Cú Dínisc son of Cú Ásaig, abbot of Ard Macha, rested.
  • AI793.1 Dub dá Leithe, abbot of Ard Macha, rested.
  • AI794.1 Kl. Airechtach, abbot of Ard Macha, [rested].
  • AI795.3 Repose of Faendledach Bec, abbot of Ard Macha.
  • AI807.1 Kl. Connmach son of Dub dá Leithe, abbot of Ard Macha, rested.
  • AI808.1 Kl. Taicthech grandson of Tigernán, lector of Ard Macha, rested.
  • AI834.1 Kl. Eógan, bishop of Ard Macha, rested.
  • AI845.2 Forannán, abbot of Ard Macha, was carried off by the heathens from Cluain Comarda, and the shrine of Pátraic was broken and carried off by them.
  • AI846.1 Kl. Niall son of Aed, king of Temuir, was drowned in the Calann, i.e. a river beside Ard Macha.
  • AI852.2 Forannan and Diarmait, abbots of Ard Macha, fell asleep.
  • AI852.2 Repose of Cathasach, abbot of Ard Macha.
  • AI874.1 Kl. The third feria [Tuesday], ninth of the moon. Féthgna, abbot of Ard Macha, rested in Christ.
  • AI883.2 Repose of Cathasach, abbot of Ard Macha.
  • AI888.3 Repose of Mael Coba son of Crunnmael, abbot of Ard Macha.
  • AI893.1 First after Bissextile. Kl. Repose of Mochta, bishop of Ard Macha.
  • AI924.2 Muiredach son of Domnall, abbot of Mainister Búiti and tanist-abbot of Ard Macha, rested.
  • AI927.1 Kl. Repose of Mael Brigte son of Tornán, abbot of Ard Macha and abbot of Í Coluim Chille.
  • AI936.1 Kl. Repose of Ioseph, abbot of Ard Macha; and Mael Pátraic succeeded him in the abbacy.
  • AI966.2 Repose of Muiredach son of Fergus, abbot of Ard Macha.
  • AI973.3 Dub dá Leithe, coarb of Patrick, came to Mumu and made his visitation; and he and the coarb of Ailbe quarrelled regarding the levy, and Mathgamain, king of Mumu, made peace between them, and they agreed upon the perpetual right of [the coarb of] Patrick.
  • AI996.4 Ard Macha was set on fire by lightning, which did not leave unburnt a steeple therein, nor a house, nor the house of an elder inside the fort.
  • AI996.5 Dub dá Leithe, coarb of Ard Macha (or, of Patrick) and coarb of Colum Cille, rested in Christ.
  • AI1001.2 Muirecán, abbot of Ard Macha, was expelled from his abbot's seat, and Mael Maire took the abbacy instead.
  • AI1005.5 Repose of Eochaid ua Flannacáin, historian of Ard Macha.
  • AI1020.3 Mael Muire son of Eochaid, coarb of Patrick, rested in Christ.
  • AI1020.4 Ard Macha was burned, both stone-church and bellhouse, and all the buildings.
  • AI1026.3 The coarb of Patrick, accompanied by his venerable clerics, and Donnchadh son of Gilla Pátraic, king of Osraige, [were] in the house of Donnchad, son of Brian, at Cenn Corad at Eastertide.
  • AI1029.8 Flaithbertach Ua Néill, on his pilgrimage to Ard Macha.

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Visit Armagh
  • Armagh, City of at Curlie
  • Online Guide to Armagh City

armagh, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑːr, ɑː, irish, mhacha, ˌaːɾˠd, ˈwaxə, macha, height, county, town, county, city, northern, ireland, well, civil, parish, ecclesiastical, capital, ireland, seat, archbishops, primates, ireland, both, roman, catholic, church. For other uses see Armagh disambiguation Armagh ɑːr ˈ m ɑː ar MAH Irish Ard Mhacha IPA ˌaːɾˠd ˠ ˈwaxe Macha s height 3 is the county town of County Armagh and a city in Northern Ireland as well as a civil parish It is the ecclesiastical capital of Ireland the seat of the Archbishops of Armagh the Primates of All Ireland for both the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of Ireland In ancient times nearby Navan Fort Eamhain Mhacha was a pagan ceremonial site and one of the great royal capitals of Gaelic Ireland Today Armagh is home to two cathedrals both named after Saint Patrick and the Armagh Observatory and is known for its Georgian architecture ArmaghIrish Ard Mhacha 1 Scots Airmagh 2 St Patrick s Cathedral ArmaghLocation within Northern IrelandPopulation16 310 2021 Census Irish grid referenceH876455 Belfast33 mi 53 km DistrictArmagh City Banbridge and CraigavonCountyCounty ArmaghCountryNorthern IrelandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townARMAGHPostcode districtBT60 BT61Dialling code028UK ParliamentNewry amp ArmaghNI AssemblyNewry amp ArmaghWebsitearmagh gov ukList of places UK Northern Ireland Armagh 54 21 00 N 6 39 17 W 54 3499 N 6 6546 W 54 3499 6 6546Although classed as a medium sized town 4 Armagh was given city status in 1994 and Lord Mayoralty status in 2012 both by Elizabeth II It had a population of 16 310 people in the 2021 Census 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Medieval era 1 3 Early modern era 1 4 Modern era 2 City status 3 Notable buildings 4 Townlands 5 Demography 5 1 2021 Census 5 2 2011 Census 6 Governance 7 Administration 8 Education 8 1 Primary 8 2 Post primary 9 Transport 10 Sport 11 Notable people 12 Climate 13 Annalistic references 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksHistory edit nbsp St Patrick s Cathedral Armagh Church of Ireland site of the original church nbsp Scotch Street c 1900 nbsp Open air market on Market StreetFoundation edit Eamhain Mhacha or Navan Fort at the western edge of Armagh was an ancient pagan ritual or ceremonial site According to Irish mythology it was one of the great royal sites of Gaelic Ireland and the capital of Ulster It appears to have been largely abandoned after the 1st century In the 3rd century a ditch and bank was dug around the top of Cathedral Hill the heart of what is now Armagh Its circular shape matches the modern street layout Evidence suggests that it was a pagan sanctuary and the successor to Navan 6 Like Navan it too was named after the goddess Macha Ard Mhacha meaning Macha s height This name was later anglicised as Ardmagh 7 8 which eventually became Armagh Navan and Armagh were linked by an ancient road which passes over Mullacreevie hill 9 After Christianity spread to Ireland the pagan sanctuary was converted into a Christian one and Armagh became the site of an important church and monastery According to tradition Saint Patrick founded his main church there in the year 445 and it eventually became the head church of Ireland Muirchu writes that a pagan chieftain named Daire would not let Patrick build a church on the hill of Ard Mhacha but instead gave him lower ground to the east One day Daire s horses died after grazing on the church land He told his men to kill Patrick but was himself struck down with illness They begged Patrick to heal him and Patrick s holy water revived both Daire and his horses Daire rewarded Patrick with a great bronze cauldron and gave him the hill of Ard Mhacha to build a church Daire has similarities with the Irish god the Dagda 10 Medieval era edit By the 7th century Armagh had become the site of the most important church monastery and monastic school in the north of Ireland 11 The Book of Armagh was produced in the monastery in the early 9th century and contains some of the oldest surviving specimens of Old Irish Armagh was at the heart of the kingdom of the Airthir a part of the Airgialla federation The church at Armagh looked to both the Airthir and neighbouring Ui Neill for patronage 11 The Ui Neill High King Niall Caille Niall of the Callan was buried at Armagh in 846 after drowning in the River Callan His son High King Aed Findliath had a house at Armagh 11 The first Viking raids on Armagh were recorded in 832 with three in one month 12 and it suffered at least ten Viking raids over the following century A hoard seemingly lost by Vikings in the River Blackwater shows the high quality of metalwork being made in Armagh at this time 11 Brian Boru High King of Ireland visited Armagh in 1004 acknowledging it as the head church of Ireland and bestowing it a large sum of gold Brian was buried at Armagh cathedral after his death at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014 13 Armagh s claim to being the head church of Ireland was formally acknowledged at the Synod of Rath Breasail in 1111 11 All English slaves in the island freed by the Council of Armagh 14 Following the Anglo Norman invasion of Ireland Armagh was attacked by Anglo Normans led by Philip de Worcester in 1185 and by John de Courcy in 1189 15 It was also raided by Ruaidri mac Duinn Sleibe of Ulaid in 1196 and 1199 16 Archbishop Mael Patraic Ua Scannail rebuilt Armagh cathedral in 1268 and founded a Franciscan friary whose remains can still be seen There was also a small Culdee community in Armagh until the 16th century 11 Early modern era edit During the 16th century Tudor conquest of Ireland Armagh suffered greatly in the conflict between the English and the O Neills Armagh was strategically important as it lay between the English Pale and the O Neill heartland of Tyrone and the town changed hands many times during the wars 17 In the 1560s English troops under Thomas Radclyffe occupied and fortified the town which was then attacked and largely destroyed by Shane O Neill After the Battle of the Yellow Ford in 1598 the routed English army took refuge at Armagh before surrendering to Hugh O Neill 17 By the end of the Nine Years War Armagh lay in ruins as shown on Richard Bartlett s 1601 map 11 Following the Nine Years War Armagh came under English dominance and the cathedral came under the control of the Protestant Church of Ireland The cathedral was rebuilt under Archbishop Christopher Hampton and the town began to be settled by Protestants from Britain as part of the Plantation of Ulster During the Irish Rebellion of 1641 many British settlers fled to Armagh cathedral for safety After negotiations with the besieged settlers Catholic rebels under Felim O Neill occupied the town In May 1642 following several rebel defeats and massacres by settlers elsewhere the rebels in Armagh seized the settlers property and set fire to the town 18 Modern era edit The parliamentary borough of Armagh was a two seat constituency in the Irish House of Commons prior to 1801 It continued as a one seat constituency in the United Kingdom House of Commons from 1801 to 1885 It had a municipal corporation which was abolished under the Municipal Corporations Ireland Act 1840 Armagh has been an educational centre since the time of Saint Patrick and thus it has been referred to as the city of saints and scholars The educational tradition continued with the foundation of the Royal School in 1608 St Patrick s College in 1834 and the Armagh Observatory in 1790 The Observatory was part of Archbishop Lord Rokeby s plan to have a university in the city This ambition was finally fulfilled albeit briefly in the 1990s when Queen s University of Belfast opened an outreach centre in the former hospital building The Catch my Pal Protestant Total Abstinence Union was founded in 1909 in Armagh by the minister of 3rd Armagh now The Mall Presbyterian Church Rev Robert Patterson Although relatively short lived it was very successful for that time attracting many tens of thousands of members It was influential in the development of a two community narrative in Ulster which was important in the Ulster Unionist campaign during the Home Rule Crisis A blue plaque historical marker commemorating Rev Patterson was erected on The Mall in 2019 Three brothers from Armagh died at the Battle of the Somme during World War I None of the three has a known grave and all are commemorated on the Thiepval Memorial to the Missing of the Somme A fourth brother was wounded in the same attack On 14 January 1921 during the Irish War of Independence a Royal Irish Constabulary RIC sergeant was assassinated by the Irish Republican Army IRA in Armagh He was attacked with a grenade as he walked along Market Street and later died of his wounds 19 On 4 September 1921 republican leaders Michael Collins and Eoin O Duffy addressed a large meeting in Armagh which was attended by up to 10 000 people 20 During the Troubles in Armagh the violence was substantial enough for a stretch of road on the outskirts of the city to be referred to by one RUC officer as Murder Mile 21 Over the span of 36 years although mainly concentrated in the years from 1969 until 1994 the small city including some outlying areas saw 86 deaths in the Troubles including those of a number of people from the city who died elsewhere in Troubles related incidents Armagh City Hall which had been built as the Tontine Buildings in 1828 22 and converted into a municipal building in 1910 23 was badly damaged in a bomb attack on 27 September 1972 24 and subsequently demolished 25 City status editSee also City status in the United Kingdom Ireland and Northern Ireland City status in Ireland and List of smallest cities in the United Kingdom As the seat of the Primate of All Ireland Armagh was historically regarded as a city and recognisably had the status by 1226 26 It had no charter granted but claimed the title by prescription Acts of the Parliament of Ireland in 1773 and 1791 refer to the City of Armagh 27 Armagh lost the status with the abolition of its city corporation by the Municipal Corporations Ireland Act 1840 after it was deemed ineffective and unrepresentative of its population From 1953 Armagh began to argue for the restoration of the status lost in 1840 28 with several applications to the Home Office being made 29 The council used the appellation city unofficially until 1994 when at Queen Elizabeth s personal request 29 Armagh along with the Welsh town of St Davids was awarded the status Charles Prince of Wales during a visit in July 1994 announced it had been granted to mark the 1 550th anniversary of the traditional date of Armagh s foundation by Saint Patrick 26 and also in recognition of Armagh s and St Davids important Christian heritage and their status as cities in the last century 30 The award of city status is typically granted to a local authority body and the letters patent was initially presented to dignitaries and Armagh District Council by Queen Elizabeth during a visit on 9 March 1995 31 Following this it was renamed Armagh City and District Council from 1 October 1995 32 Armagh City Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council presently holds the status on behalf of the city as there is no localised council body since the aforementioned districts were merged in 2015 as a result of local government reform Armagh contains the lowest population of all the cities of Northern Ireland and is fifth smallest in the UK Its urban area covering 3 97 sq mi 10 3 km2 makes it the smallest city by size in Northern Ireland however several other cities are smaller when the UK is taken as a whole Notable buildings edit nbsp St Patrick s Cathedral Armagh Roman Catholic Armagh is the site of two cathedrals both on hills and both named after Saint Patrick The Church of Ireland cathedral dates back to around 445 The present day post Reformation Roman Catholic cathedral was constructed during the latter half of the 19th century and features twin 64m spires making it the tallest such structure in the county Armagh is one of the few cities in the world that is home to two cathedrals of the same name Armagh has a Georgian area of heritage importance Perhaps one of the more well known of the buildings is the former women s prison 33 The construction of Armagh Gaol began in 1780 and was extended in the 1840s and 1850s The front facade of the prison was built in the Georgian style while the later development based on the design of Pentonville HM Prison is Victorian 33 For most of its working life it was a women s prison although not exclusively so Armagh Gaol was the primary women s prison in Northern Ireland In 1986 the prison closed and its prisoners were transferred to the new prison at Maghaberry 33 The city is home to the Armagh Observatory founded in 1790 and to the Armagh Planetarium established in 1968 to complement the research work of the Observatory The palace of the Archbishop of Armagh is now the local council offices and along with the archbishop s private chapel is open to the public The Palace Stables heritage centre is a reconstructed stable block dating from the 18th century which was once part of the Archbishop s estate Among the city s chief glories is Armagh Public Library on Abbey Street It was founded in 1771 by Archbishop Richard Robinson later created the first Baron Rokeby in 1777 using his own library as its nucleus 34 It is especially rich in 17th and 18th century books in English including Dean Jonathan Swift s own copy of the first edition of his Gulliver s Travels with his manuscript corrections Armagh Market House was built in 1815 as a two storey five bay building and is currently used as a library Armagh County Museum is the oldest county museum in Ireland 35 The building dates from 1833 and was originally a school house It was opened as the County Museum in 1937 nbsp Armagh Prison nbsp Market House nbsp Armagh Public Library nbsp Courthouse nbsp Armagh County Museum nbsp Armagh Planetarium nbsp The Mall looking toward the First Presbyterian Church and Gospel Hall nbsp Archbishop s PalaceTownlands edit nbsp Armagh showing townlands Corporation townland Other townlands Built up area Countryside Greenfield landArmagh is within the civil parish of Armagh Like the rest of Ireland this parish is divided into townlands whose names mostly come from the Irish language When these townlands were built upon they lent their names to various streets roads and housing estates In 1830 most of Armagh s urban townlands were amalgamated for administration and became known as Corporation Lands or simply Corporation 36 The surrounding townlands remained as separate units and they were eventually built upon too They are listed below alongside their likely etymologies 7 37 Aghamoat from Irish Achadh Mochta Mochta s field Ballynahone More from Baile na hAbhann townland of the river Cargagh from Cairgeach rocky land Cavanacaw from Cabhan an Chatha hollow of the battle or Cabhan na Caithe hollow of the chaff Drumadd formerly Drumadokeenan from Dromad Ui Chianain O Keenan s ridge Drumarg from Droim Mairge ridge of the boundary Drumman More from Dromann the ridge Killuney from Cill Liamhna Liamhain s church Legarhill or Mullaghcreevie from Mullach Craoibhe hilltop of the branch legar is from an old English word for a military camp Longstone named after a standing stone Lurgyvallen from Lorga Ui Mheallain O Mallon s long low ridge Mullynure from Mullach an Iuir hilltop of the yew part of Grange parish Parkmore from Pairc Mhor great field Tullyelmer originally Tullyelmaine possibly from Tulaigh Aluine hillock of the yellow clay Umgola from Iomghuala hill shoulder Some of the former townlands included Doonullagh possibly from Dun Ulaidhe fort of the tomb 38 Drumbreda from Droim Brighde Brigid s hill 39 Knockadrain from Cnoc an Droighin blackthorn hill site of the Catholic cathedral 40 Knockamell from Cnoc Ui Aghmaill O Hamill s hill site of the Observatory 39 Knockenboy from Cnocan Buidhe yellow hillock 38 Lisanally formerly Liosconalia from Lios Chon Allaidh meaning fort of the wolf Cu Allaidh s fort 39 Tullynalecky from Tulaigh na Leice flagstone hill site of St Patrick s Catholic graveyard 41 Templebreed from Teampall Brighde Brigid s chapel Templefertagh from Teampall Fearta chapel of the graves or miracles Tullyasnagh 38 Demography editNational Identity of Armagh residents 2021 Nationality Per centIrish 47 9 Northern Irish 24 1 British 20 2 2021 Census edit On Census day 21 March 2021 there were 16 310 people living in Armagh 5 Of these 67 3 10 977 belong to or were brought up in the Catholic Christian faith and 23 76 3 875 belong to or were brought up in a Protestant and Other Christian including Christian related religion 1 35 belong to other religions and 7 59 have no religious background 47 93 had an Irish national identity 42 20 17 indicated that they had a British national identity 43 and 24 08 had a Northern Irish national identity 44 respondents could indicate more than one national identity 2011 Census edit On Census day 27 March 2011 there were 14 777 people living in Armagh 5871 households accounting for 0 82 of the NI total 45 representing an increase of 1 3 on the Census 2001 population of 14 590 46 Of these 20 90 were aged under 16 years and 15 44 were aged 65 and over 52 52 of the usually resident population were female and 47 48 were male 68 85 belong to or were brought up in the Catholic Christian faith and 26 95 belong to or were brought up in a Protestant and Other Christian including Christian related religion 44 39 had an Irish national identity 27 18 indicated that they had a British national identity and 26 43 had a Northern Irish national identity respondents could indicate more than one national identity 37 years was the average median age of the population 18 76 had some knowledge of Irish Gaelic and 4 08 had some knowledge of Ulster Scots Governance editArmagh City and District Council was a single district council until 2015 when it merged with Banbridge District Council and Craigavon Borough Council under local government reorganisation in Northern Ireland to become Armagh City Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council sometimes colloquially referred to as the ABC council Armagh is part of the Newry and Armagh Assembly constituency Together with part of the district of Newry and Mourne it forms the Newry amp Armagh constituency for elections to the Westminster Parliament and Northern Ireland Assembly Administration edit nbsp Former houses on Charlemont Place beside The Mall now occupied by Education Authority Southern The Education Authority Southern and the Southern Health and Social Care Trust 47 have their headquarters in the city which has a long reputation as an administrative centre The secretariat of the North South Ministerial Council is based in Armagh and consists jointly of members of the civil services of both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland Armagh is the seat of both the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh and the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh both of whom hold the position of Primate of All Ireland for their respective denominations Education editPrimary edit Armstrong Primary School Christian Brothers Primary School Armagh The Drelincourt Primary School Dromintee Primary School Drumhillery Primary School Mount St Catherine s Primary School The Royal School Preparatory School Saints and Scholars Integrated Primary School St Malachy s Primary School St Patrick s Primary SchoolPost primary edit City of Armagh High School St Catherine s College Armagh St Patrick s Grammar School Armagh The Royal School Armagh Southern Regional College 48 Transport editThe Ulster Railway linked Armagh with Belfast in 1848 and Monaghan in 1858 49 The Newry and Armagh Railway N amp A opened in 1864 and the Castleblayney Keady and Armagh Railway CK amp A was completed in 1910 49 In 1876 the Ulster Railway became part of the new Great Northern Railway GNR which took over the N amp A in 1879 and the CK amp A in 1911 50 The Armagh rail disaster which killed 80 people occurred on 12 June 1889 on the N amp A line near Armagh 51 52 The partition of Ireland in 1922 hastened the railways decline and the GNR closed the Keady Castleblayney section of the CKA in 1923 53 The GNR withdrew passenger trains from the Armagh Keady section of the CKA in 1922 and closed the Armagh Markethill section of the N amp A in 1933 53 The Government of Northern Ireland forced the GNR Board to close all remaining lines serving Armagh railway station on 1 October 1957 the goods branch from Armagh to Keady and the main line through Armagh from Portadown as far as the border at Glaslough on the way to Monaghan 53 54 Northern Ireland Railways train services run from Portadown to Belfast Great Victoria Street and the cross border Enterprise service runs via Newry to Dublin Connolly Poyntzpass also has a limited service When he was Minister for the Department for Regional Development then MLA Danny Kennedy had indicated plans to restore the railway from Armagh station to Portadown 55 Sport edit nbsp Armagh s Mall is home to the Armagh Cricket Club and has also staged international matches Armagh City Football Club which plays in the NIFL Championship is the main association football club and the City of Armagh Rugby Club is the local rugby club Lisanally Rangers F C is another football team playing in the Mid Ulster Football League Gaelic football is represented by Armagh Harps and Pearse ogs The local GAA handball club is Eugene Quinn s named after a player from the Armagh area who died on an attempted swim from Tory Island to the coast of Donegal The local hurling club is Armagh Cuchulainns In 2004 the Royal School Armagh became only the second team in history to win both the schools rugby and hockey cups in the same year The Mall in Armagh has a long association with cricket and is the location of the Armagh Cricket Club clubhouse Armagh Athletics Club was founded in 1969 The club organises the Armagh International 5k Road Race annually The race was first organised in 1980 and takes place every February with athletes coming from England Scotland Wales continental Europe and the United States Notable people editOnly people who are sufficiently notable to have individual entries on Wikipedia have been included in the list and in each instance their birth or residence has been verified by citations Tom Boyd Irish professional golfer was born in Armagh in 1888 56 Daragh Carville playwright and screenwriter whose works include Cherrybomb was born in Armagh in 1969 57 David Cunningham born 1954 musician 58 Moses Harvey clergyman and naturalist famous for studies of the giant squid was born in Armagh in 1820 59 John Lennox born 1943 mathematician who grew up in Armagh and attended the Royal School He specialises in group theory is a philosopher of science and a Christian apologist 60 Patrick Magee actor and director known for his collaborations with Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter was born in Armagh in 1922 61 Saint Malachy of Armagh was born there in 1094 62 Seamus McGarvey Academy Award nominated cinematographer Atonement Anna Karenina was born in Armagh in 1967 63 Colin Morgan actor known for playing the lead role in Merlin 64 was born in Armagh in 1986 65 Ian Paisley politician founder of the Democratic Unionist Party and First Minister of Northern Ireland was born in Armagh in 1926 66 Thomas Romney Robinson 1792 1882 astronomer lived in Armagh 67 Christopher Vokes Major General was born in Armagh in 1904 68 William Whitford 1846 physician and temperance reformer 69 Charles Wood composer was born in Armagh in 1866 70 Climate editArmagh has a temperate maritime climate Cfb according to the Koppen climate classification system The nearest Met Office standard weather station at Armagh Observatory provides long term weather data back to 1794 71 72 The lowest temperature was 15 0 C 5 0 F on 7 February 1895 This is also the coldest temperature on record for February in Northern Ireland 73 74 Armagh also holds the record for highest daily minimum temperature in Northern Ireland at 20 6 C 69 1 F on 31 July 1868 74 The lowest daily maximum temperature on record is 8 0 C 17 6 F which occurred on 20 December 2010 75 Typically the warmest day of the year will reach 26 1 C 79 0 F 76 and 3 7 days a year should attain a maximum temperature of 25 1 C 77 2 F or above 77 Typically the coldest night of the year should fall to 6 8 C 19 8 F 78 and 40 4 nights should register an air frost 79 All averages refer to the 1981 2010 observation period Climate data for Armagh elevation 42 m 138 ft 1981 2010 normals extremes 1844 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 15 7 60 3 17 1 62 8 21 8 71 2 22 6 72 7 26 2 79 2 30 4 86 7 31 4 88 5 29 4 84 9 27 6 81 7 22 7 72 9 16 8 62 2 16 6 61 9 31 4 88 5 Mean daily maximum C F 7 4 45 3 8 1 46 6 10 2 50 4 12 6 54 7 15 6 60 1 18 0 64 4 19 7 67 5 19 3 66 7 16 9 62 4 13 4 56 1 10 0 50 0 7 7 45 9 13 3 55 9 Daily mean C F 4 7 40 5 4 9 40 8 6 7 44 1 8 5 47 3 11 2 52 2 13 8 56 8 15 7 60 3 15 4 59 7 13 2 55 8 10 1 50 2 7 0 44 6 4 9 40 8 9 6 49 3 Mean daily minimum C F 1 9 35 4 1 6 34 9 3 1 37 6 4 3 39 7 6 7 44 1 9 6 49 3 11 7 53 1 11 4 52 5 9 5 49 1 6 8 44 2 3 9 39 0 2 1 35 8 6 1 43 0 Record low C F 14 3 6 3 15 0 5 0 12 4 9 7 7 1 19 2 2 3 27 9 0 8 33 4 0 0 32 0 2 3 36 1 0 6 30 9 5 6 21 9 8 3 17 1 14 6 5 7 15 0 5 0 Average rainfall mm inches 74 5 2 93 54 0 2 13 65 6 2 58 57 6 2 27 57 8 2 28 58 4 2 30 62 7 2 47 76 3 3 00 68 1 2 68 85 5 3 37 74 6 2 94 77 1 3 04 812 3 31 98 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 14 3 11 0 13 3 11 6 11 8 10 9 11 7 13 0 12 2 13 7 13 6 13 3 150 3Mean monthly sunshine hours 46 4 69 0 96 6 142 6 173 5 144 2 137 0 133 3 113 9 90 2 58 5 40 3 1 245 5Source 1 Met Office 80 Source 2 AOMD 81 Belfast Telegraph July record high 82 Annalistic references edit nbsp The remains of Armagh s Franciscan friarySee Annals of Inisfallen AI AI715 2 Flann Febla abbot of Ard Macha rested AI729 1 Kl Repose of Suibne abbot of Ard Macha AI750 1 Kl Repose of Congus abbot of Ard Macha AI768 3 Repose of Feradach son of Suibne abbot of Ard Macha AI772 2 Suibne abbot of Ard Macha rested AI791 1 Kl Cu Dinisc son of Cu Asaig abbot of Ard Macha rested AI793 1 Dub da Leithe abbot of Ard Macha rested AI794 1 Kl Airechtach abbot of Ard Macha rested AI795 3 Repose of Faendledach Bec abbot of Ard Macha AI807 1 Kl Connmach son of Dub da Leithe abbot of Ard Macha rested AI808 1 Kl Taicthech grandson of Tigernan lector of Ard Macha rested AI834 1 Kl Eogan bishop of Ard Macha rested AI845 2 Forannan abbot of Ard Macha was carried off by the heathens from Cluain Comarda and the shrine of Patraic was broken and carried off by them AI846 1 Kl Niall son of Aed king of Temuir was drowned in the Calann i e a river beside Ard Macha AI852 2 Forannan and Diarmait abbots of Ard Macha fell asleep AI852 2 Repose of Cathasach abbot of Ard Macha AI874 1 Kl The third feria Tuesday ninth of the moon Fethgna abbot of Ard Macha rested in Christ AI883 2 Repose of Cathasach abbot of Ard Macha AI888 3 Repose of Mael Coba son of Crunnmael abbot of Ard Macha AI893 1 First after Bissextile Kl Repose of Mochta bishop of Ard Macha AI924 2 Muiredach son of Domnall abbot of Mainister Buiti and tanist abbot of Ard Macha rested AI927 1 Kl Repose of Mael Brigte son of Tornan abbot of Ard Macha and abbot of I Coluim Chille AI936 1 Kl Repose of Ioseph abbot of Ard Macha and Mael Patraic succeeded him in the abbacy AI966 2 Repose of Muiredach son of Fergus abbot of Ard Macha AI973 3 Dub da Leithe coarb of Patrick came to Mumu and made his visitation and he and the coarb of Ailbe quarrelled regarding the levy and Mathgamain king of Mumu made peace between them and they agreed upon the perpetual right of the coarb of Patrick AI996 4 Ard Macha was set on fire by lightning which did not leave unburnt a steeple therein nor a house nor the house of an elder inside the fort AI996 5 Dub da Leithe coarb of Ard Macha or of Patrick and coarb of Colum Cille rested in Christ AI1001 2 Muirecan abbot of Ard Macha was expelled from his abbot s seat and Mael Maire took the abbacy instead AI1005 5 Repose of Eochaid ua Flannacain historian of Ard Macha AI1020 3 Mael Muire son of Eochaid coarb of Patrick rested in Christ AI1020 4 Ard Macha was burned both stone church and bellhouse and all the buildings AI1026 3 The coarb of Patrick accompanied by his venerable clerics and Donnchadh son of Gilla Patraic king of Osraige were in the house of Donnchad son of Brian at Cenn Corad at Eastertide AI1029 8 Flaithbertach Ua Neill on his pilgrimage to Ard Macha See also editBook of Armagh List of localities in Northern Ireland by population Market houses in Northern IrelandReferences edit Ard Mhacha Armagh Placenames Database of Ireland Logainm ie Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Home PDF Archived PDF from the original on 25 October 2013 Retrieved 25 July 2011 Field John 1980 Place names of Great Britain and Ireland Newton Abbot Devon David amp Charles p 25 ISBN 0389201545 OCLC 6964610 Settlement Information on Armagh City Northern Ireland Neighbourhood Information Service Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 a b Religion or religion brought up in NISRA Retrieved 15 August 2023 Koch John T Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO 2006 p 80 a b Placenames Database of Ireland Archived 23 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine see archival records Hill George The Fall of Irish Chiefs and Clans The Conquest of Ireland Irish Roots Cafe 2004 p 114 ISBN 978 0940134423 Lynn Chris Navan Fort Archaeology and Myth Wordwell 2003 p 88 o hogain Daithi Myth Legend amp Romance An encyclopaedia of the Irish folk tradition Prentice Hall Press 1991 pp 357 358 a b c d e f g Duffy Sean Medieval Ireland An Encyclopedia Routledge 2005 pp 48 50 Roesdahl Else 2016 The Vikings Third ed Penguin Books p 233 ISBN 978 0 141 98476 6 Llywelyn Morgan 1014 Brian Boru amp the Battle for Ireland Courier Dover 2020 pp 97 240 Internet History Sourcebooks Project sourcebooks fordham edu DeBreffny Brian Mott George 1976 The Churches and Abbeys of Ireland London Thames amp Hudson pp 60 61 Smith Brendan Colonisation and Conquest in Medieval Ireland The English in Louth 1170 1330 Cambridge University Press 1999 p 62 a b Quinn Kevin The Lost Castle of Armagh History Armagh Annaleigh Margey Eamon Darcy Elaine Murphy editors The 1641 Depositions and the Irish Rebellion Routledge 2015 p 92 Dublin City University Archived 9 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine Chronology of Irish History 1919 1923 January 1921 Dublin City University Archived 12 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Chronology of Irish History 1919 1923 September 1921 Blanche Ed 6 January 1985 Irish Police Face Peril of Murder Mile Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Tontine Buildings Dictionary of Irish Architects Retrieved 5 June 2021 Armagh Town Hall Dictionary of Irish Architects Retrieved 5 June 2021 Armagh City Hall after a bomb explosion on Wednesday September 27 1972 Northern Slant 15 August 2017 Retrieved 5 June 2021 McFarland John 1 February 2004 A modern vision Eric Lindsay at Armagh Astronomy amp Geophysics 45 1 18 1 22 doi 10 1046 j 1468 4004 2003 45118 x a b Beckett 2005 p 134 Archived 7 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine 13 amp 14 George III c 40 Archived 6 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine and 31 George III c 46 Beckett 2005 p 133 Archived 22 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine a b Beckett John 2014 Inventing and reinventing the modern city the 2012 city status competition in the United Kingdom Urban History 41 4 705 720 doi 10 1017 S0963926813001053 Beckett J V 2005 City status in the British Isles 1830 2002 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 133 ISBN 9780754650676 Retrieved 5 January 2018 1995 Queen marks peace in Belfast 9 March 1995 Archived from the original on 7 March 2008 Retrieved 5 January 2019 Change of District Name Armagh Order Northern Ireland 1995 This order changes the name of the local government district of Armagh to Armagh City and District from 1st October 1995 No 5656 The Belfast Gazette 15 September 1995 p 804 a b c Kerr Robert Three Gaols Images of Crumlin Road Long Kesh and Armagh Prisons MSF Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 9568069 0 1 Armagh Public Library Collection RASCAL Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Armagh County Museum Museums and galleries The Art Fund Archived from the original on 2 December 2015 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Illustrations of Townlands in Maps Celebrating Ulster s Townlands Ulster Place Name Society Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 28 November 2015 Place Names NI Home Retrieved 5 September 2020 a b c Corporation Place Names NI a b c Oates Gerry Origins of some Armagh place names History Armagh Spring 2007 o hAdhmaill Padraig Gravestone Inscriptions in Sandy Hill Graveyard Armagh City Seanchas Ardmhacha Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society Vol 11 No 2 1985 p 395 Warner Richard The Armagh Pagan Statues Ulster Journal of Archaeology Third Series Vol 72 2013 2014 pp 55 69 National Identity Irish NISRA Retrieved 18 August 2023 National Identity British NISRA Retrieved 18 August 2023 National Identity Northern Irish NISRA Retrieved 18 August 2023 Census 2011 Population Statistics for Armagh Settlement Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency NISRA Retrieved 15 April 2019 nbsp This article contains quotations from this source which is available under the Open Government Licence v3 0 c Crown copyright Census 2001 Usually Resident Population KS01 Settlements Table view Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency NISRA p 1 Retrieved 10 August 2019 Southern Health and Social Care Trust Archived from the original on 14 October 2018 Retrieved 14 October 2018 Welcome to Southern Regional College Further and Higher Education Archived from the original on 22 July 2019 Retrieved 20 November 2009 a b Hajducki S Maxwell 1974 A Railway Atlas of Ireland Newton Abbott David amp Charles map 8 ISBN 0 7153 5167 2 Hajducki op cit page xiii McCutcheon Alan 1969 Ireland Railway History in Pictures Vol 1 Newton Abbott David amp Charles pp 104 105 ISBN 0 7153 4651 2 Adair Gordon 12 June 2014 Armagh train disaster remembered 125 years on BBC News Archived from the original on 15 June 2014 Retrieved 2 November 2014 a b c Hajducki op cit map 39 Baker Michael H C 1972 Irish Railways since 1916 London Ian Allan pp 153 207 ISBN 0 7110 0282 7 Kennedy has rail hopes for Armagh line restoration Portadown Times 10 August 2013 Retrieved 24 August 2014 Ireland s Teardrop the Last of the Auld Country Irish Golf Archive Archived from the original on 28 August 2014 Retrieved 14 February 2017 McDonald Henry 26 April 2009 Writer wants an end to balaclava drama The Guardian Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 15 February 2015 Cunningham David a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Aldrich F A 1994 Harvey Moses In Cook Ramsay Hamelin Jean eds Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol XIII 1901 1910 online ed University of Toronto Press Billen Andrew 17 November 2010 God is a person not a theory The Times Retrieved 5 January 2020 Pattie David 2000 The Complete Critical Guide to Samuel Beckett Psychology Press pp 38 ISBN 978 0 415 20253 4 Archived from the original on 17 June 2016 Retrieved 16 October 2015 Grattan Flood William 1910 St Malachy Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 9 New York Robert Appleton Company Archived from the original on 3 March 2012 Retrieved 25 May 2013 Cinematographer Seamus McGarvey Public Interview Irish Film and Television Network 28 April 2008 Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 15 February 2015 McCaughan Peter 14 November 2011 Colin Morgan Parks Up in Belfast Film Culture Northern Ireland Retrieved 9 February 2016 Merlin a new 13 part drama series on BBC One BBC Archived from the original on 22 September 2008 Retrieved 1 September 2008 McCrystal Cal 18 September 1994 Paisley A blast from the past The Independent Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 15 February 2015 Directors of Armagh Observatory Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 5 January 2020 Morton Desmond Foot Richard 13 December 2016 Christopher Vokes The Canadian Encyclopaedia online ed Historica Canada Retrieved 14 February 2017 Football historian Peter Lupson sheds light on 1892 Liverpool and Everton rent row Liverpool Echo 12 November 2009 Retrieved 1 April 2011 Wood Charles WT888C A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Armagh Observatory eyes automation move BBC News 12 April 2017 Retrieved 15 July 2021 Daily Maximum Temperatures Archived from the original on 2 April 2012 Retrieved 22 September 2011 Daily Minimum Temperatures Archived from the original on 2 April 2012 Retrieved 22 September 2011 a b UK climate extremes Met Office Retrieved 21 May 2020 DECEMBRE 2010 A ARMAGH Meteo climat Retrieved 18 February 2021 gt Annual average warmest day Retrieved 22 September 2011 gt 25c days Archived from the original on 16 November 2016 Retrieved 22 September 2011 Annual average coldest night Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 September 2011 gt Annual average frost incidence Retrieved 22 September 2011 Station Armagh 1981 2010 Met Office Retrieved 25 February 2021 Armagh Air Temperature Data Armagh Observatory Retrieved 14 March 2019 Armagh hotter than Spain as NI s record temperature broken for third time in a week Belfast Telegraph Belfast Telegraph 23 July 2021 Retrieved 9 January 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Armagh Visit Armagh Armagh City of at Curlie Online Guide to Armagh City nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Armagh Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Armagh amp oldid 1175817664, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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