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Barony (Ireland)

In Ireland, a barony (Irish: barúntacht, plural barúntachtaí[1]) is a historical subdivision of a county, analogous to the hundreds into which the counties of England were divided. Baronies were created during the Tudor reconquest of Ireland, replacing the earlier cantreds formed after the original Norman invasion.[2] Some early baronies were later subdivided into half baronies with the same standing as full baronies.

Map of the Baronies of Ireland in 1899

Baronies were mainly cadastral rather than administrative units. They acquired modest local taxation and spending functions in the 19th century before being superseded by the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898. Subsequent adjustments of county boundaries mean that some baronies now straddle two counties.[3]

The final catalogue of baronies numbered 331, with an average area of 255 km2 (98 sq mi; 63,000 acres); therefore, each county was divided, on average, into 10 or 11 baronies.

Creation

The island of Ireland was "shired" into counties in two distinct periods: the east and south during the Anglo-Norman period (from the 1169 invasion to the early fourteenth century) and the rest in the Tudor conquest of the sixteenth century. "Barony" was used in three overlapping but distinct senses in the early period:

Over the centuries, these senses diverged, and many administrative baronies were not associated with feudal or noble titles.[4] Spurious "barony" titles have been sold by using the names of administrative baronies for which there is no corresponding hereditary or prescriptive barony.[4][5] In counties Louth and Meath, the administrative subdivisions were called "baronies" from the beginning,[4] originally as portions given by Hugh de Lacy, Lord of Meath to his vassals. Further south the name "cantred" was used till the fifteenth century.[4] The cantreds declined with the rest of the English colony as its influence retreated to the Pale in the fourteenth century, and when the Tudors and Stuarts revived and extended county government, the baronies which they delimited often bore little relation to the earlier cantreds.[2][4]

Most cantreds corresponded to the túath ('country') or trícha cét ('thirty hundred [men]') of a Gaelic chief. However, sometimes baronies combined small territories, or split a large one, or were created without regard for the earlier boundaries.[4] In the Norman period most Gaelic chiefs were killed, expelled, or subordinated by the new Norman lord; in the Tudor period, many Gaelic and Hibernicized lords retained their land by pledging allegiance to the Crown under surrender and regrant.

Sir John Perrot's commissioners reported 184 "cantreds, otherwise called hundreds or baronies" in 1589;[6] William Petty reported 252 baronies in 1672.[7]

Baronies were sometimes subdivided, and occasionally combined. The parts of a subdivided barony were called half-baronies, but had the same legal standing. Some subdivisions came about when new counties were formed, and the new boundary split a pre-existing barony. In three cases, there are adjacent half-baronies in neighbouring counties with the same name: Rathdown (Dublin—Wicklow), Fore (Meath—Westmeath), and Ballymoe (Galway—Roscommon). Subdivision happened especially in the 19th century, when qualifiers "Upper"/"Lower"(/"Middle"), "North"/"South", or "East/"West" were used for the half-baronies.[4] The main basis for this subdivision was the Grand Jury (Ireland) Act, 1836, which empowered a county's grand jury to divide baronies of at least 45,000 acres (18,000 ha) and unite baronies totalling at most 40,000 acres (16,000 ha).[8] An 1837 act relaxed these restrictions for County Fermanagh, where many baronies were split by Lough Erne.[9] The baronies of Iveagh, Muskerry, and Connello were each subdivided twice: Upper and Lower Iveagh each have Upper and Lower Halves; East and West Muskerry each have East and West Divisions; the western divisions split from Upper and Lower Connello were named Shanid and Glenquin respectively.[10][11] When County Tipperary was split into North and South Ridings in 1838, the barony of Kilnamanagh was split into Upper and Lower half-baronies.[12]

At the Reformation the parishes for civil purposes were the ecclesiastical parishes of the established Church of Ireland. Originally each parish was usually within a single barony, but less so over time. A townland might be an exclave of a parish, and potentially of its barony; under the Valuation of Lands (Ireland) Act 1836, detached parts of baronies were annexed to an adjacent barony, but not so for parishes.[13] The rationalisation of small ecclesiastical parishes into larger benefices sometimes entailed merging the corresponding civil parishes, which might thus cross barony (and county) boundaries.

Peculiar districts

Many towns had a specific royal charter granting them borough status similar to English law. These were originally independent of the baronies, which were rural divisions of the "county at large". By the time of Beaufort's 1792 Memoir of Ireland, this was true of fewer towns. Beaufort distinguishes between baronies and "peculiar districts"; the latter encompassing counties corporate and liberties in the environs of some of the older or larger towns and cities.

Liberties

The liberties listed by Beaufort separately from baronies are those of Kinsale, Mallow and Youghal in County Cork;[14] Callan in County Kilkenny;[15] Kilmallock in County Limerick;[16] Derry and Coleraine in County Londonderry;[17] and Wexford in County Wexford.[18] Of these, those of Wexford, Mallow, and Youghal are no longer counted as separate from the adjacent baronies. Those of Kinsale, Callen, and Kilmallock are now counted as baronies. A 1791 act dealt with the two in County Londonderry; it made the North West Liberties of Londonderry, together with the city, into a barony, while the liberties on the east bank of the River Foyle were attached to the half barony of Tirkeeran.[19] Similarly, the North East Liberties of Coleraine formed a barony together with the town, while the liberties on the west bank of the River Bann were attached to the separate half-barony of Coleraine.[19] The lands of the Lordship of Newry, originating with the Cistercians of Newry Abbey and passing to the Earl of Kilmorey, were similarly regularised into a barony of County Down and a civil parish of County Armagh.[20]

Counties corporate

There were eight counties corporate: the "County of the City" of each of Cork, Dublin, Limerick, Kilkenny, and Waterford, and the "County of the Town" of each of Carrickfergus, Drogheda and Galway.[21][22] These were excluded from the enclosing "county-at-large" and exercised at a single level the functions which elsewhere were split between county and barony level.[22] Thus, they had "baronial presentment sessions" although they were not strictly speaking baronies.[23][24] Each such city or town also had a municipal corporation which had parallel authority with the grand jury; however, each county corporate except Carrickfergus included rural "liberties" outside the municipal boundary. The Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840 abolished the corporations of Carrickfergus and Galway, while the Counties and Boroughs (Ireland) Act 1840, passed simultaneously, transferred the liberties of the other six counties corporate to the adjoining county-at-large. The transferred area was sometimes assigned to one or more existing county baronies, but sometimes made a barony in its own right. The reduced-size counties corporate continued till the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898, at which point each of those of Kilkenny and the three towns was merged with a neighbouring county to form a new administrative county, while the other four counties of cities each became a county borough. Both before and after 1898, where a statute presupposed that a county was divided into baronies, judges sometimes construed it by assuming that each county corporate constituted a single barony.[23][25]

Historical functions

The various Plantations of Ireland were organised largely by barony. Different categories of English and Scottish settlers were planted in particular baronies in the midlands and Munster. Likewise the "precincts" into which the plantation of Ulster was organised were mostly coterminous with baronies, though some were split or combined.[26] In certain counties after the Cromwellian reconquest, Adventurers got lands in half the baronies, with soldiers in the other half.[27] The Irish who had forfeited their lands in those regions were resettled in Connacht and Clare, with each county of origin assigned to particular destination baronies.[28] William Petty's Down Survey of 1655–6 collected statistics and produced maps at barony level to assist the reorganisation.

Acts of 1787 and 1792 allowed the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to appoint a constable for each barony, and the county grand jury to appoint up to 16 sub-constables. These powers were seldom used and the constables had few powers; they were usually older men nicknamed "old Barnys", with the archetypal "old Barny McKeown".[29] They were superseded by the Royal Irish Constabulary.[29]

The cess to pay for roads, bridges, and other public works was set per barony. "Presentment sessions", where petitioners applied for funding for such works, were originally held as part of the county assizes, though the costs were paid from the barony cess if the work was of local benefit only. The county grand jury was supposed to have included jurors from each barony, though this did not always happen.[30] From 1819,[31] significantly modified in 1836,[32] baronial presentment sessions were held for these purposes, with a local jury picked by the county grand jury from among the barony's highest rate-payers, according to a complicated formula.[33] The baronial presentment sessions were a convoluted process, lacking public confidence and marred by allegations of corruption and favouritism.[33] Special emergency sessions were held during the Famine of the 1840s for the make-work schemes.[33]

Several parallel local administrative divisions were formed in the nineteenth century, which were not based on the barony.[4] The Poor Law Unions were established in 1838, each centred on an eponymous town; most new or altered responsibilities were given to them in subsequent decades.[34] These Unions which were divided into district electoral divisions (DEDs) for funding purposes.[35] Petty sessions courts for civil cases and quarter sessions for criminal cases used still another set of land divisions.

For each two-seat county constituency in the Irish House of Commons, the election was held in the county town, with a separate polling booth for electors resident in each barony or half-baroiny. The single-seat divisions into which the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 split most Irish county constituencies were defined largely or exclusively in terms of the baronies which they comprised; however, in some cases a barony was split parish by parish between two divisions. The 1891 census was the last for which returns were aggregated by barony as well as by Union and DED; the 1901 census used only the latter classification, though it and the 1911 census included the barony in the detailed returns.

The 1898 Act replaced the county assizes with an elected county council; at a lower level, the county was divided into urban and rural districts, each with an elected council. These councils had power to levy rates and build public works, and the baronial presentment sessions were abolished.

Modern existence

While baronies continue to be officially defined units, they are no longer used for many administrative purposes. Their official status is illustrated by Placenames Orders made since 2003, where official Irish names of baronies are listed under "Administrative units".[36]

Baronies continue to be used in land registration, and specification such as in planning permissions. For example, the form for registration of a freehold property includes a schedule "To contain description of the property, giving area, townland, barony and county, or, if in a city or urban district, the street or road and city or urban district".[37]

Barony boundaries have remained essentially unchanged since 1898. An exception occurs when land is reclaimed from the sea, whereupon the maritime boundary of the coastal land units will be extended accordingly. For example, a 1994 statutory instrument extended the boundary of the Barony of Arklow, along with the boundaries of the county (Wicklow), the district electoral division (Arklow Rural), the civil parish (Arklow), and the townlands (Rock Big, Rock Little, and Money Big).[38]

The Local Government (Ireland) Act also caused a number of county boundaries to be modified, with the result that a number of baronies now cross county boundaries. This can cause confusion to genealogy researchers, who may be unable to find an area referred to as being in a particular county in 19th century sources in the modern county. Most markedly, the entire territory of the small barony of Kilculliheen was moved from County Waterford to County Kilkenny. Likewise in 1976, when suburbs of Drogheda were transferred from County Meath to County Louth, barony boundaries were not adjusted.[39]

The marginal relevance of baronies means many people have no idea which barony they live in.[4] However, some remain a focus for local patriotism. Some public houses and older provincial hotels bear the name of the barony in which they are located; likewise some clubs of the Gaelic Athletic Association, for example Carbury (County Kildare), Castlerahan, and Kilmurry Ibrickane. Four of the six regional divisions of Cork GAA are named after baronies corresponding to major parts of their respective areas: Carbery, Duhallow, Imokilly, and Muskerry.

List of baronies

The final catalogue of baronies numbered 331. A figure of 273 is also quoted, by combining those divided into half-baronies, as by East/West, North/South, or Upper/Middle/Lower divisions. Every point in Ireland is in precisely one of the listed divisions. However, the municipal area of the four cities with barony status in 1898 has extended since then into the surrounding baronies. Prior to 1898, the baronies around Dublin City were shrunk according as they ceded land to the expanding city; but there is now land which is both within the current city boundaries and within one of the pre-1898 county baronies. Notably, the Barony of Dublin, created in 1842, is almost entirely within the city, although still separate from the Barony of Dublin City.

See also

References

  1. ^ "barony". Focal. Retrieved 8 December 2010.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b Mac Cotter 2005, pp.327–330
  3. ^ General Register Office of Ireland (1904). "Alphabetical index to the baronies of Ireland". Census of Ireland 1901: General topographical index. Command papers. Vol. Cd. 2071. HMSO. pp. 966–978.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nicholls 1996
  5. ^ Burns, John (24 July 2005). "Experts attack sale of "bogus" Barony of Clare for €90,000". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 19 March 2010.
  6. ^ History of the political connection between England and Ireland p.121,fn by William Barron, 1780
  7. ^ Petty, The Political Anatomy of Ireland, Chapter VI[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Grand Jury (Ireland) Act, 1836". Irish Statute Book. pp. 175: Baronies, &c. may be divided, or may be united. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  9. ^ County Fermanagh Baronies Act, 1837 1 Vict. c.82
  10. ^ lewis, Samuel (1837). "Limerick". A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland.
  11. ^ Westropp, Thomas Johnson (1907). "The Ancient Castles of the County of Limerick (Western Baronies)". Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section C. Royal Irish Academy. 26: 201–472. JSTOR 25502743.
  12. ^ Murphy, Donal A. (1994). The two Tipperarys: the national and local politics —devolution and self-determination— of the unique 1838 division into two ridings, and the aftermath. Regional studies in political and administrative history. Vol. 1. Relay. p. 71. ISBN 0-946327-14-9.
  13. ^ "c.84 §§51–53". Valuation of Lands (Ireland) Act 1836. Public General Statutes. Vol. 6 & 7 William IV. G. W. Eyre and W. Spottiswoode, Printers to the Queen. 1836. pp. 742–3. Retrieved 16 August 2013.
  14. ^ Beaufort 1792 p.94
  15. ^ Beaufort 1792 p.52
  16. ^ Beaufort 1792 p.86
  17. ^ Beaufort 1792 p.25
  18. ^ Beaufort 1792 p.49
  19. ^ a b Richard Nun, ed. (1801). "40 Geo iii c.80: An Act to explain and amend an Act passed in the Thirty-fifth Year of his present Majesty's Reign, entitled An Act for regulating the Election of Members to serve in Parliament, and for repealing the several Acts therein mentioned, and to explain and amend an Act passed in the Thirty-Seventh Year of said Reign, entitled An Act for the further Regulation of the Election of Members to serve in Parliament.". From the Thirty-ninth Year of George III. A. D. 1799, to the Fortieth Year of George III. A. D. 1800, inclusive. Statutes passed in the Parliaments held in Ireland ...: from the third year of Edward the second, A.D. 1310 to the fortieth year of George III A.D. 1800, inclusive. Vol. 12. George Grierson. pp. 300–303.
  20. ^ Parliamentary gazetteer of Ireland, Vol.III pp.23–4
  21. ^ Clarkson et al, Notes on Baronies of Ireland
  22. ^ a b Hancock 1876
  23. ^ a b "Cases in the Queen's Bench: In re Miller and Dowell. In re Meade". Irish Law Reports. Dublin: Hodges and Smith. 2: 307. 1840. There are other acts which have been held not to extend to the county of the city of Dublin on account of this word "barony" occurring in them
  24. ^ County Works (Ireland) Act 1846 [9 & 10 Vict. c. 2] s.23
  25. ^ "Reports; Murphy v Cork County Council". New Irish Jurist and Local Government Review. 2 (49): 289. 17 October 1902. JSTOR 44606341 – via HeinOnline.
  26. ^ Hill, George (1877). "6: Results and Arrangements; II.". An Historical Account of the Plantation in Ulster at the Commencement of the Seventeenth Century, 1608–1620. Belfast: M'Caw, Stevenson & Orr. pp. 201–4. ISBN 9785876338280. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  27. ^ Prendergast 1868, pp. 79–80
  28. ^ Prendergast 1868, pp. 208–210
  29. ^ a b Curtis, Robert H. (1871). "1: Position of matters previous to the formation of the Constabulary". The History of the Royal Irish Constabulary (2nd ed.). Dublin: McGlashan & Gill. pp. 2–3.
  30. ^ Roche, Desmond; John Collins (1982). "Origins of Irish Local Government". Local government in Ireland (3rd ed.). Institute of Public Administration. pp. 27–31. ISBN 0-906980-06-2.
  31. ^ 59 Geo.III c.84
  32. ^ 3 & 4 Will.IV c.116
  33. ^ a b c Hancock 1876, pp.186–91
  34. ^ Hancock 1876, p.177
  35. ^ Hancock 1876, pp.173–4
  36. ^ Irish Statute Book, Statutory Instruments: 2003 Nos 520, 521, 522, 523, 525; 2004 No 872; 2005 No 847
  37. ^ "S.I. No. 349/2009 – Land Registration Rules 2009". Irish Statute Book. Government of Ireland. 2 September 2009. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  38. ^ "S.I. No. 333/1994 – Maritime Boundaries (County of Wicklow) Order, 1994". Irish Statute Book. Government of Ireland. 25 October 1994. Retrieved 19 March 2010.
  39. ^ "Local Government Provisional Order Confirmation Act, 1976". Irish Statute Book. Government of Ireland. 20 December 1976. Retrieved 20 March 2010.

Bibliography

  • Beaufort, Daniel Augustus (1792). Memoir of a map of Ireland. London: W. Faden, J. Debrett, and James Edwards. Retrieved 23 March 2010.
  • Clarkson, L.A.; L. Kennedy; E.M. Crawford; M.W. Dowling (12 November 1997). "Notes on Baronies of Ireland 1821–1891" (PDF). Database of Irish Historical Statistics : Religion, 1861–1911. UK Data Archive. Retrieved 19 March 2010.
  • Hancock, W. Neilson (1876). "Local Government and Taxation in Ireland". In J. W. Probyn (ed.). Local government and taxation. Cobden Club Essays. Cassel, Fetter & Galpin. pp. 173–231. Retrieved 18 March 2010.
  • MacCotter, Paul (2005). "Functions of the cantred in medieval Ireland". Peritia. Brepols. 19: 308–332. doi:10.1484/J.Peri.3.581. ISSN 0332-1592.
  • Nicholls, Kenneth (Autumn 1996). "Media Taken in by Bogus Baronies". History Ireland. Wordwell Ltd. 4 (3): 7–8. JSTOR 27724359.
  • Petty, William (1851). Thomas Aiskew Larcom (ed.). History of the Cromwellian survey of Ireland, A.D. 1655-6: commonly called "The down survey". Dublin: Irish Archaeological and Celtic Society.
  • Prendergast, John Patrick (1868). The Cromwellian settlement of Ireland. New York City: P. M. Haverty.
  • Price, Liam (1954). "Ráith Oinn". Éigse: A Journal of Irish Studies. 7: 182–190.
  • The Parliamentary Gazetteer of Ireland adapted to the new Poor-Law, Franchise, Municipal and Ecclesiastical arrangements ... as existing in 1844–45. Dublin: A. Fullarton & Co. 1846. Vol. I: A–C, Vol. II: D–M, Vol. III: N–Z

External links

  • includes large JPGs of the county maps from Robert Lloyd Praeger's copy of Philips' Handy Atlas of the Counties of Ireland (c.1880) with baronies clearly differentiated by colour and border.
  • by Dennis Walsh (archived)
  • Alphabetical List of Baronies in Northern Ireland Public Record Office of Northern Ireland
  • 2011 Census Boundaries, including shapefiles for baronies; from the Central Statistics Office, Ireland

barony, ireland, this, article, about, geographical, subdivisions, titles, nobility, peerage, ireland, barons, feudal, honours, irish, feudal, barony, ireland, barony, irish, barúntacht, plural, barúntachtaí, historical, subdivision, county, analogous, hundred. This article is about geographical subdivisions For titles of nobility see Peerage of Ireland Barons For feudal honours see Irish feudal barony In Ireland a barony Irish baruntacht plural baruntachtai 1 is a historical subdivision of a county analogous to the hundreds into which the counties of England were divided Baronies were created during the Tudor reconquest of Ireland replacing the earlier cantreds formed after the original Norman invasion 2 Some early baronies were later subdivided into half baronies with the same standing as full baronies Map of the Baronies of Ireland in 1899 Baronies were mainly cadastral rather than administrative units They acquired modest local taxation and spending functions in the 19th century before being superseded by the Local Government Ireland Act 1898 Subsequent adjustments of county boundaries mean that some baronies now straddle two counties 3 The final catalogue of baronies numbered 331 with an average area of 255 km2 98 sq mi 63 000 acres therefore each county was divided on average into 10 or 11 baronies Contents 1 Creation 1 1 Peculiar districts 1 1 1 Liberties 1 1 2 Counties corporate 2 Historical functions 3 Modern existence 4 List of baronies 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksCreation EditSee also Cantred The island of Ireland was shired into counties in two distinct periods the east and south during the Anglo Norman period from the 1169 invasion to the early fourteenth century and the rest in the Tudor conquest of the sixteenth century Barony was used in three overlapping but distinct senses in the early period a feudal barony was an honour or large manor a parliamentary barony was a rank of the peerage of Ireland giving the right to sit in the Parliament of Ireland an administrative barony or cantred was a unit for taxation purposes 4 Over the centuries these senses diverged and many administrative baronies were not associated with feudal or noble titles 4 Spurious barony titles have been sold by using the names of administrative baronies for which there is no corresponding hereditary or prescriptive barony 4 5 In counties Louth and Meath the administrative subdivisions were called baronies from the beginning 4 originally as portions given by Hugh de Lacy Lord of Meath to his vassals Further south the name cantred was used till the fifteenth century 4 The cantreds declined with the rest of the English colony as its influence retreated to the Pale in the fourteenth century and when the Tudors and Stuarts revived and extended county government the baronies which they delimited often bore little relation to the earlier cantreds 2 4 Most cantreds corresponded to the tuath country or tricha cet thirty hundred men of a Gaelic chief However sometimes baronies combined small territories or split a large one or were created without regard for the earlier boundaries 4 In the Norman period most Gaelic chiefs were killed expelled or subordinated by the new Norman lord in the Tudor period many Gaelic and Hibernicized lords retained their land by pledging allegiance to the Crown under surrender and regrant Sir John Perrot s commissioners reported 184 cantreds otherwise called hundreds or baronies in 1589 6 William Petty reported 252 baronies in 1672 7 Baronies were sometimes subdivided and occasionally combined The parts of a subdivided barony were called half baronies but had the same legal standing Some subdivisions came about when new counties were formed and the new boundary split a pre existing barony In three cases there are adjacent half baronies in neighbouring counties with the same name Rathdown Dublin Wicklow Fore Meath Westmeath and Ballymoe Galway Roscommon Subdivision happened especially in the 19th century when qualifiers Upper Lower Middle North South or East West were used for the half baronies 4 The main basis for this subdivision was the Grand Jury Ireland Act 1836 which empowered a county s grand jury to divide baronies of at least 45 000 acres 18 000 ha and unite baronies totalling at most 40 000 acres 16 000 ha 8 An 1837 act relaxed these restrictions for County Fermanagh where many baronies were split by Lough Erne 9 The baronies of Iveagh Muskerry and Connello were each subdivided twice Upper and Lower Iveagh each have Upper and Lower Halves East and West Muskerry each have East and West Divisions the western divisions split from Upper and Lower Connello were named Shanid and Glenquin respectively 10 11 When County Tipperary was split into North and South Ridings in 1838 the barony of Kilnamanagh was split into Upper and Lower half baronies 12 At the Reformation the parishes for civil purposes were the ecclesiastical parishes of the established Church of Ireland Originally each parish was usually within a single barony but less so over time A townland might be an exclave of a parish and potentially of its barony under the Valuation of Lands Ireland Act 1836 detached parts of baronies were annexed to an adjacent barony but not so for parishes 13 The rationalisation of small ecclesiastical parishes into larger benefices sometimes entailed merging the corresponding civil parishes which might thus cross barony and county boundaries Peculiar districts Edit Many towns had a specific royal charter granting them borough status similar to English law These were originally independent of the baronies which were rural divisions of the county at large By the time of Beaufort s 1792 Memoir of Ireland this was true of fewer towns Beaufort distinguishes between baronies and peculiar districts the latter encompassing counties corporate and liberties in the environs of some of the older or larger towns and cities Liberties Edit The liberties listed by Beaufort separately from baronies are those of Kinsale Mallow and Youghal in County Cork 14 Callan in County Kilkenny 15 Kilmallock in County Limerick 16 Derry and Coleraine in County Londonderry 17 and Wexford in County Wexford 18 Of these those of Wexford Mallow and Youghal are no longer counted as separate from the adjacent baronies Those of Kinsale Callen and Kilmallock are now counted as baronies A 1791 act dealt with the two in County Londonderry it made the North West Liberties of Londonderry together with the city into a barony while the liberties on the east bank of the River Foyle were attached to the half barony of Tirkeeran 19 Similarly the North East Liberties of Coleraine formed a barony together with the town while the liberties on the west bank of the River Bann were attached to the separate half barony of Coleraine 19 The lands of the Lordship of Newry originating with the Cistercians of Newry Abbey and passing to the Earl of Kilmorey were similarly regularised into a barony of County Down and a civil parish of County Armagh 20 Counties corporate Edit There were eight counties corporate the County of the City of each of Cork Dublin Limerick Kilkenny and Waterford and the County of the Town of each of Carrickfergus Drogheda and Galway 21 22 These were excluded from the enclosing county at large and exercised at a single level the functions which elsewhere were split between county and barony level 22 Thus they had baronial presentment sessions although they were not strictly speaking baronies 23 24 Each such city or town also had a municipal corporation which had parallel authority with the grand jury however each county corporate except Carrickfergus included rural liberties outside the municipal boundary The Municipal Corporations Ireland Act 1840 abolished the corporations of Carrickfergus and Galway while the Counties and Boroughs Ireland Act 1840 passed simultaneously transferred the liberties of the other six counties corporate to the adjoining county at large The transferred area was sometimes assigned to one or more existing county baronies but sometimes made a barony in its own right The reduced size counties corporate continued till the Local Government Ireland Act 1898 at which point each of those of Kilkenny and the three towns was merged with a neighbouring county to form a new administrative county while the other four counties of cities each became a county borough Both before and after 1898 where a statute presupposed that a county was divided into baronies judges sometimes construed it by assuming that each county corporate constituted a single barony 23 25 Historical functions EditThe various Plantations of Ireland were organised largely by barony Different categories of English and Scottish settlers were planted in particular baronies in the midlands and Munster Likewise the precincts into which the plantation of Ulster was organised were mostly coterminous with baronies though some were split or combined 26 In certain counties after the Cromwellian reconquest Adventurers got lands in half the baronies with soldiers in the other half 27 The Irish who had forfeited their lands in those regions were resettled in Connacht and Clare with each county of origin assigned to particular destination baronies 28 William Petty s Down Survey of 1655 6 collected statistics and produced maps at barony level to assist the reorganisation Acts of 1787 and 1792 allowed the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland to appoint a constable for each barony and the county grand jury to appoint up to 16 sub constables These powers were seldom used and the constables had few powers they were usually older men nicknamed old Barnys with the archetypal old Barny McKeown 29 They were superseded by the Royal Irish Constabulary 29 The cess to pay for roads bridges and other public works was set per barony Presentment sessions where petitioners applied for funding for such works were originally held as part of the county assizes though the costs were paid from the barony cess if the work was of local benefit only The county grand jury was supposed to have included jurors from each barony though this did not always happen 30 From 1819 31 significantly modified in 1836 32 baronial presentment sessions were held for these purposes with a local jury picked by the county grand jury from among the barony s highest rate payers according to a complicated formula 33 The baronial presentment sessions were a convoluted process lacking public confidence and marred by allegations of corruption and favouritism 33 Special emergency sessions were held during the Famine of the 1840s for the make work schemes 33 Several parallel local administrative divisions were formed in the nineteenth century which were not based on the barony 4 The Poor Law Unions were established in 1838 each centred on an eponymous town most new or altered responsibilities were given to them in subsequent decades 34 These Unions which were divided into district electoral divisions DEDs for funding purposes 35 Petty sessions courts for civil cases and quarter sessions for criminal cases used still another set of land divisions For each two seat county constituency in the Irish House of Commons the election was held in the county town with a separate polling booth for electors resident in each barony or half baroiny The single seat divisions into which the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 split most Irish county constituencies were defined largely or exclusively in terms of the baronies which they comprised however in some cases a barony was split parish by parish between two divisions The 1891 census was the last for which returns were aggregated by barony as well as by Union and DED the 1901 census used only the latter classification though it and the 1911 census included the barony in the detailed returns The 1898 Act replaced the county assizes with an elected county council at a lower level the county was divided into urban and rural districts each with an elected council These councils had power to levy rates and build public works and the baronial presentment sessions were abolished Modern existence EditWhile baronies continue to be officially defined units they are no longer used for many administrative purposes Their official status is illustrated by Placenames Orders made since 2003 where official Irish names of baronies are listed under Administrative units 36 Baronies continue to be used in land registration and specification such as in planning permissions For example the form for registration of a freehold property includes a schedule To contain description of the property giving area townland barony and county or if in a city or urban district the street or road and city or urban district 37 Barony boundaries have remained essentially unchanged since 1898 An exception occurs when land is reclaimed from the sea whereupon the maritime boundary of the coastal land units will be extended accordingly For example a 1994 statutory instrument extended the boundary of the Barony of Arklow along with the boundaries of the county Wicklow the district electoral division Arklow Rural the civil parish Arklow and the townlands Rock Big Rock Little and Money Big 38 The Local Government Ireland Act also caused a number of county boundaries to be modified with the result that a number of baronies now cross county boundaries This can cause confusion to genealogy researchers who may be unable to find an area referred to as being in a particular county in 19th century sources in the modern county Most markedly the entire territory of the small barony of Kilculliheen was moved from County Waterford to County Kilkenny Likewise in 1976 when suburbs of Drogheda were transferred from County Meath to County Louth barony boundaries were not adjusted 39 The marginal relevance of baronies means many people have no idea which barony they live in 4 However some remain a focus for local patriotism Some public houses and older provincial hotels bear the name of the barony in which they are located likewise some clubs of the Gaelic Athletic Association for example Carbury County Kildare Castlerahan and Kilmurry Ibrickane Four of the six regional divisions of Cork GAA are named after baronies corresponding to major parts of their respective areas Carbery Duhallow Imokilly and Muskerry List of baronies EditMain article List of baronies of Ireland The final catalogue of baronies numbered 331 A figure of 273 is also quoted by combining those divided into half baronies as by East West North South or Upper Middle Lower divisions Every point in Ireland is in precisely one of the listed divisions However the municipal area of the four cities with barony status in 1898 has extended since then into the surrounding baronies Prior to 1898 the baronies around Dublin City were shrunk according as they ceded land to the expanding city but there is now land which is both within the current city boundaries and within one of the pre 1898 county baronies Notably the Barony of Dublin created in 1842 is almost entirely within the city although still separate from the Barony of Dublin City See also EditBarony country subdivision List of Irish local government areas 1898 1921 TownlandReferences Edit barony Focal Retrieved 8 December 2010 permanent dead link a b Mac Cotter 2005 pp 327 330 General Register Office of Ireland 1904 Alphabetical index to the baronies of Ireland Census of Ireland 1901 General topographical index Command papers Vol Cd 2071 HMSO pp 966 978 a b c d e f g h i j Nicholls 1996 Burns John 24 July 2005 Experts attack sale of bogus Barony of Clare for 90 000 The Sunday Times Retrieved 19 March 2010 History of the political connection between England and Ireland p 121 fn by William Barron 1780 Petty The Political Anatomy of Ireland Chapter VI permanent dead link Grand Jury Ireland Act 1836 Irish Statute Book pp 175 Baronies amp c may be divided or may be united Retrieved 25 June 2014 County Fermanagh Baronies Act 1837 1 Vict c 82 lewis Samuel 1837 Limerick A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland Westropp Thomas Johnson 1907 The Ancient Castles of the County of Limerick Western Baronies Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy Section C Royal Irish Academy 26 201 472 JSTOR 25502743 Murphy Donal A 1994 The two Tipperarys the national and local politics devolution and self determination of the unique 1838 division into two ridings and the aftermath Regional studies in political and administrative history Vol 1 Relay p 71 ISBN 0 946327 14 9 c 84 51 53 Valuation of Lands Ireland Act 1836 Public General Statutes Vol 6 amp 7 William IV G W Eyre and W Spottiswoode Printers to the Queen 1836 pp 742 3 Retrieved 16 August 2013 Beaufort 1792 p 94 Beaufort 1792 p 52 Beaufort 1792 p 86 Beaufort 1792 p 25 Beaufort 1792 p 49 a b Richard Nun ed 1801 40 Geo iii c 80 An Act to explain and amend an Act passed in the Thirty fifth Year of his present Majesty s Reign entitled An Act for regulating the Election of Members to serve in Parliament and for repealing the several Acts therein mentioned and to explain and amend an Act passed in the Thirty Seventh Year of said Reign entitled An Act for the further Regulation of the Election of Members to serve in Parliament From the Thirty ninth Year of George III A D 1799 to the Fortieth Year of George III A D 1800 inclusive Statutes passed in the Parliaments held in Ireland from the third year of Edward the second A D 1310 to the fortieth year of George III A D 1800 inclusive Vol 12 George Grierson pp 300 303 Parliamentary gazetteer of Ireland Vol III pp 23 4 Clarkson et al Notes on Baronies of Ireland a b Hancock 1876 a b Cases in the Queen s Bench In re Miller and Dowell In re Meade Irish Law Reports Dublin Hodges and Smith 2 307 1840 There are other acts which have been held not to extend to the county of the city of Dublin on account of this word barony occurring in them County Works Ireland Act 1846 9 amp 10 Vict c 2 s 23 Reports Murphy v Cork County Council New Irish Jurist and Local Government Review 2 49 289 17 October 1902 JSTOR 44606341 via HeinOnline Hill George 1877 6 Results and Arrangements II An Historical Account of the Plantation in Ulster at the Commencement of the Seventeenth Century 1608 1620 Belfast M Caw Stevenson amp Orr pp 201 4 ISBN 9785876338280 Retrieved 28 July 2015 Prendergast 1868 pp 79 80 Prendergast 1868 pp 208 210 a b Curtis Robert H 1871 1 Position of matters previous to the formation of the Constabulary The History of the Royal Irish Constabulary 2nd ed Dublin McGlashan amp Gill pp 2 3 Roche Desmond John Collins 1982 Origins of Irish Local Government Local government in Ireland 3rd ed Institute of Public Administration pp 27 31 ISBN 0 906980 06 2 59 Geo III c 84 3 amp 4 Will IV c 116 a b c Hancock 1876 pp 186 91 Hancock 1876 p 177 Hancock 1876 pp 173 4 Irish Statute Book Statutory Instruments 2003 Nos 520 521 522 523 525 2004 No 872 2005 No 847 S I No 349 2009 Land Registration Rules 2009 Irish Statute Book Government of Ireland 2 September 2009 Retrieved 3 March 2010 S I No 333 1994 Maritime Boundaries County of Wicklow Order 1994 Irish Statute Book Government of Ireland 25 October 1994 Retrieved 19 March 2010 Local Government Provisional Order Confirmation Act 1976 Irish Statute Book Government of Ireland 20 December 1976 Retrieved 20 March 2010 Bibliography EditBeaufort Daniel Augustus 1792 Memoir of a map of Ireland London W Faden J Debrett and James Edwards Retrieved 23 March 2010 Clarkson L A L Kennedy E M Crawford M W Dowling 12 November 1997 Notes on Baronies of Ireland 1821 1891 PDF Database of Irish Historical Statistics Religion 1861 1911 UK Data Archive Retrieved 19 March 2010 Hancock W Neilson 1876 Local Government and Taxation in Ireland In J W Probyn ed Local government and taxation Cobden Club Essays Cassel Fetter amp Galpin pp 173 231 Retrieved 18 March 2010 MacCotter Paul 2005 Functions of the cantred in medieval Ireland Peritia Brepols 19 308 332 doi 10 1484 J Peri 3 581 ISSN 0332 1592 Nicholls Kenneth Autumn 1996 Media Taken in by Bogus Baronies History Ireland Wordwell Ltd 4 3 7 8 JSTOR 27724359 Petty William 1851 Thomas Aiskew Larcom ed History of the Cromwellian survey of Ireland A D 1655 6 commonly called The down survey Dublin Irish Archaeological and Celtic Society Prendergast John Patrick 1868 The Cromwellian settlement of Ireland New York City P M Haverty Price Liam 1954 Raith Oinn Eigse A Journal of Irish Studies 7 182 190 The Parliamentary Gazetteer of Ireland adapted to the new Poor Law Franchise Municipal and Ecclesiastical arrangements as existing in 1844 45 Dublin A Fullarton amp Co 1846 Vol I A C Vol II D M Vol III N ZExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baronies of Ireland Itineraries for Irish Topographical Botany includes large JPGs of the county maps from Robert Lloyd Praeger s copy of Philips Handy Atlas of the Counties of Ireland c 1880 with baronies clearly differentiated by colour and border Barony Map of Ireland by Dennis Walsh archived Alphabetical List of Baronies in Northern Ireland Public Record Office of Northern Ireland 2011 Census Boundaries including shapefiles for baronies from the Central Statistics Office Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Barony Ireland amp oldid 1146760507, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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