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County Kerry

County Kerry (Irish: Contae Chiarraí) is a county in Ireland. It is in the Southern Region and the province of Munster. It is named after the Ciarraige who lived in part of the present county.[2] The population of the county was 155,258 at the 2022 census.[3]

County Kerry
Contae Chiarraí
Nickname: 
The Kingdom
Motto(s): 
Comhar, Cabhair, Cairdeas  (Irish)
"Co-operation, Help, Friendship"
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°10′N 9°45′W / 52.167°N 9.750°W / 52.167; -9.750Coordinates: 52°10′N 9°45′W / 52.167°N 9.750°W / 52.167; -9.750
CountryIreland
ProvinceMunster
RegionSouthern
Establishedc. 1300[1]
County townTralee
Government
 • Local authorityKerry County Council
 • Dáil ÉireannKerry
 • European ParliamentSouth
Area
 • Total4,807 km2 (1,856 sq mi)
 • Rank5th
Highest elevation1,039 m (3,409 ft)
Population
 (2022)
 • Total155,258
 • Rank 16th
 • Density32/km2 (84/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC±0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (IST)
Eircode routing keys
V23, V31, V92, V93 (primarily)
Telephone area codes064, 066, 068 (primarily)
Vehicle index
mark code
KY
WebsiteOfficial website

A popular tourist destination, Kerry's geography is defined by the MacGillycuddy's Reeks mountains, the Dingle, Iveragh and Beara peninsulas, and the Blasket and Skellig islands. It is bordered by County Limerick to the north-east and Cork County to the south and south-east.

Geography and subdivisions

Kerry is the fifth largest of Ireland's 32 traditional counties by area and the sixteenth largest by population.[4] It is the second largest of Munster's six counties by area, and the fourth largest by population. Uniquely, it is bordered by only two other counties: County Limerick to the east and County Cork to the south-east. The county town is Tralee although the Catholic diocesan seat is Killarney, which is one of Ireland's most famous tourist destinations. The Lakes of Killarney, an area of outstanding natural beauty, are located in Killarney National Park. The Reeks District is home to Carrauntoohil, Ireland's highest mountain at 1,039m. The tip of the Dingle Peninsula is the westernmost point of Ireland.

Baronies

There are nine historic baronies in the county. 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".

 
The Three Sisters, West Kerry.
  • ClanmauriceClann Mhuiris
  • CorkaguinyCorca Dhuibhne
  • Dunkerron North – Dún Ciaráin Thuaidh
  • Dunkerron South – Dún Ciaráin Theas
  • Glanarought – Gleann na Ruachtaí
  • Iraghticonnor – Oireacht Uí Chonchúir
  • Iveragh (Peninsula)Uíbh Ráthach
  • Magunihy – Maigh gCoinchinn
  • TrughanacmyTriúcha an Aicme

Most populous towns

Rank Town Population
(2016 census)
1 Tralee 23,691
2 Killarney 14,504
3 Listowel 4,820
4 Castleisland 2,486
5 Kenmare 2,376
6 Killorglin 2,199
7 Dingle 2,050
8 Ballybunion 1,413
9 Cahersiveen 1,041

Physical geography

 
Near Teeravane, County Kerry

Kerry faces the Atlantic Ocean and, typically for an Eastern-Atlantic coastal region, features many peninsulas and inlets, principally the Dingle Peninsula, the Iveragh Peninsula, and the Beara Peninsula. The county is bounded on the west by the Atlantic Ocean and on the north by the River Shannon. Kerry is one of the most mountainous regions of Ireland and its three highest mountains, Carrauntoohil, Beenkeragh and Caher, all part of the MacGillycuddy's Reeks range.

Just off the coast are a number of islands, including the Blasket Islands, Valentia Island and the Skelligs. Skellig Michael is a World Heritage Site, famous for the medieval monastery clinging to the island's cliffs. The county contains the extreme west point of Ireland, Dunmore Head on the Dingle Peninsula, or including islands, Tearaght Island, part of the Blaskets. The most westerly inhabited area of Ireland is Dún Chaoin, on the Dingle Peninsula. The River Feale, the River Laune and the Roughty River flow through Kerry, into the Atlantic.

 
Dingle Peninsula

Climate

The North Atlantic Current, part of the Gulf Stream, flows north past Kerry and the west coast of Ireland, resulting in milder temperatures than would otherwise be expected at the 52 North latitude. This means that subtropical plants such as the strawberry tree and tree ferns, not normally found in northern Europe, thrive in the area.

Because of the mountainous area and the prevailing southwesterly winds, Kerry is among the regions with the highest rainfall in Ireland. Owing to its location, there has been a weather reporting station on Valentia for many centuries. The Irish record for rainfall in one day is 243.5 mm (9.59 in), recorded at Cloore Lake in Kerry in 1993.[5]

In 1986 the remnants of Hurricane Charley crossed over Kerry as an extratropical storm causing extensive rainfall, flooding and damage.

History

Kerry (Irish: Ciarraí or in the original old-Irish language reform spelling Ciarraighe) means the "people of Ciar" which was the name of the Gaelic tribe who lived in part of the present county. The legendary founder of the tribe was Ciar, son of Fergus mac Róich.[8] In Old Irish "Ciar" meant black or dark brown, and the word continues in use in modern Irish as an adjective describing a dark complexion.[9] The suffix raighe, meaning people/tribe, is found in various -ry place names in Ireland, such as OsryOsraighe Deer-People/Tribe. The county's nickname is the Kingdom.[10]

Lordship of Ireland

On 27 August 1329, by Letters Patent, Maurice FitzGerald, 1st Earl of Desmond was confirmed in the feudal seniority of the entire county palatine of Kerry, to him and his heirs male, to hold of the Crown by the service of one knight's fee. In the 15th century, the majority of the area now known as County Kerry was still part of the County Desmond, the west Munster seat of the Earl of Desmond, a branch of the Hiberno-Norman FitzGerald dynasty, known as the Geraldines.

Kingdom of Ireland

 
Gallarus Oratory near Dingle, which dates back to the 6th century.
 
Little Skellig, as seen from Skellig Michael.

In 1580, during the Second Desmond Rebellion, one of the most infamous massacres of the Sixteenth century, the Siege of Smerwick, took place at Dún an Óir near Ard na Caithne (Smerwick) at the tip of the Dingle Peninsula. The 600-strong Italian, Spanish and Irish papal invasion force of James Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald was besieged by the English forces and massacred.

In 1588, when the fleet of the Spanish Armada in Ireland were returning to Spain during stormy weather, many of its ships sought shelter at the Blasket Islands and some were wrecked.

During the Nine Years' War, Kerry was again the scene of conflict, as the O'Sullivan Beare clan joined the rebellion. In 1602 their castle at Dunboy was besieged and taken by English troops. Donal O'Sullivan Beare, in an effort to escape English retribution and to reach his allies in Ulster, marched all the clan's members and dependants to the north of Ireland. Due to harassment by hostile forces and freezing weather, very few of the 1,000 O'Sullivans who set out reached their destination.

In the aftermath of the War, much of the native owned land in Kerry was confiscated and given to English settlers or 'planters'. The head of the MacCarthy Mor family, Florence MacCarthy was imprisoned in London and his lands were divided between his relatives and colonists from England, such as the Browne family.

In the 1640s Kerry was engulfed by the Irish Rebellion of 1641, an attempt by Irish Catholics to take power in the Protestant Kingdom of Ireland. The rebellion in Kerry was led by Donagh McCarthy, 1st Viscount Muskerry. His son the Earl of Clancarty held the county during the subsequent Irish Confederate Wars and his forces were among the last to surrender to the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland in 1652. The last stronghold to fall was Ross Castle, near Killarney.

The Famine

In the 18th and 19th centuries Kerry became increasingly populated by poor tenant farmers, who came to rely on the potato as their main food source. As a result, when the potato crop failed in 1845, Kerry was very hard hit by the Great Irish Famine of 1845–49. In the wake of the famine, many thousands of poor farmers emigrated to seek a better life in America and elsewhere. Kerry was to remain a source of emigration until recent times (up to the 1980s). Another long term consequence of the famine was the Land War of the 1870s and 1880s, in which tenant farmers agitated, sometimes violently, for better terms from their landlords.

War of Independence and Civil War

 
Ross Castle and Lough Leane, Killarney National Park.

In the 20th century, Kerry was one of the counties most affected by the Irish War of Independence (1919–21) and Irish Civil War (1922–23). In the war of Independence, the Irish Republican Army fought a guerilla war against the Royal Irish Constabulary, and British military. One of the more prominent incidents in the conflict in Kerry was the siege of Tralee in November 1920, when the Black and Tans placed Tralee under curfew for a week, burned many homes, and shot dead a number of local people in retaliation for the IRA killing of five local policemen the night before. Another was the Headford Junction ambush in spring 1921, when IRA units ambushed a train carrying British soldiers outside Killarney. About ten British soldiers, three civilians and two IRA men were killed in the ensuing gun battle. Violence between the IRA and the British was ended in July 1921, but nine men, four British soldiers and five IRA men, were killed in a shoot-out in Castleisland on the day of the truce itself, indicating the bitterness of the conflict in Kerry.

Following the Anglo-Irish Treaty, most of the Kerry IRA units opposed the settlement. One exception existed in Listowel where a pro-Treaty garrison was established by local Flying Column commandant Thomas Kennelly in February 1922. This unit consisted of 200 regular soldiers along with officers and NCOs. A batch of rifles, machine guns and a Crossley tender were sent from Dublin. Listowel would remain a base for those supporting the treaty throughout the conflict.[11] The town was eventually overcome by superior numbers of anti-Treaty forces belonging to the Kerry No. 2 and 3 Brigades in June 1922. In the ensuing civil war between pro- and anti-treaty elements, Kerry was perhaps the worst affected area of Ireland. Initially the county was held by the Anti-Treaty IRA but it was taken for the Irish Free State after seaborne landings by National Army troops at Fenit, Tarbert and Kenmare in August 1922. Thereafter the county saw a bitter guerilla war between men who had been comrades only a year previously. The republicans, or "irregulars", mounted a number of successful actions, for example attacking and briefly re-taking Kenmare in September 1922. In March 1923 Kerry saw a series of massacres of republican prisoners by National Army soldiers, in reprisal for the ambush of their men—the most notorious being the killing of eight men with mines at Ballyseedy, near Tralee. The internecine conflict was brought to an end in May 1923 as the rule of law was re-established following the death of IRA Chief of Staff Liam Lynch, and the order by Frank Aiken to dump all arms.

Local government

County council

The principal local authority is Kerry County Council. The council provides a number of services including planning, roads maintenance, fire brigade, council housing, water supply, waste collection, recycling and landfill, higher education grants and funding for arts and culture.[12]

Town councils

An additional tier of local government existed in the three largest towns in the county, Killarney, Listowel and Tralee until the 2014 local elections were held on 23 May 2014. These elections were held following the changes effected by the Local Government Reform Act 2014. The act abolished town councils and introduced municipal districts. County Kerry was divided into four municipal districts, which are identical with the local electoral areas (LEA) used for election of Councillors.[13]

Parliamentary representation

Following boundary changes in 2016, Kerry is represented in Dáil Éireann by five TDs returned from a single parliamentary constituency. The TDs elected to the 33rd Dáil Éireann at the 2020 general election included Pa Daly (SF), Norma Foley (FF), Brendan Griffin (FG), Danny Healy-Rae (Independent) and Michael Healy-Rae (Independent).[citation needed]

Culture

As a region on the extremity of Ireland, the culture of Kerry was less susceptible to outside influences and has preserved the Irish language, as well as Irish traditional music, song and dance. The Sliabh Luachra area of northeast Kerry, that borders Limerick and Cork, is renowned for its traditional music, dance and song, especially its slides, polkas and fiddle playing. The Siamsa Tíre centre in Tralee is a hub of traditional Irish pastimes. Corca Dhuibhne and Uíbh Ráthach are considered Gaeltacht regions and Irish culture is also very strong in these areas.

The Blasket Islands off the Dingle Peninsula are known for their rich literary heritage; authors such as Peig Sayers, Muiris Ó Súilleabháin and Tomás Ó Criomhthain have all written books about life on the islands, which were evacuated in 1953 due to increasingly extreme weather conditions that made them uninhabitable. John B Keane, a native of Listowel, is considered one of Ireland's greatest playwrights and is known for his works such as The Field, Sive and Big Maggie. The annual Listowel Writers' Week Festival serves as a celebration of Irish writers past and present.

Sport

Gaelic games

Kerry is known for its senior Gaelic football team. Gaelic football is by far the dominant sport in the county, and Kerry has the most successful of all football teams; the Kerry footballers have won the Sam Maguire cup 38 times, with the next nearest team Dublin on 30 wins.[14] Hurling is popular at club level in north Kerry, although the county has only won one All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, in 1891. The senior team currently compete in the Joe McDonagh Cup.[15]

Association football

The Kerry District League is the main competition for association football in the county. Tralee Dynamos have represented Kerry in the A Championship, while they and Killarney Celtic also competed in the Munster Senior League during the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Cricket

Cricket is played in County Kerry by County Kerry Cricket Club. They play their home games at the Oyster Oval near Tralee.[16]

Irish language

In 2011 there were 6,083 Irish language speakers in County Kerry, with 4,978 native speakers within the Kerry Gaeltacht. This does not count the 1,105 attending the four Gaelscoils (Irish language primary schools) and two Gaelcholáiste (Irish language secondary schools) outside the Kerry Gaeltacht.[17]

Places of interest

 
Cliffs in West Co. Kerry

Kerry, with its mountains, lakes and nearly 1,000 kilometres of Atlantic coastline is among the most scenic areas in Ireland and is among the most significant tourist destinations in Ireland. Killarney is the centre of the tourism industry, which is a significant element of the economy in Kerry. The Kerry Way, Dingle Way and Beara Way are walking routes in the county. The Ring of Kerry on the Iveragh Peninsula is a popular route for tourists and cyclists. The pedestrian version is the scenic Kerry Way which follows ancient paths generally higher than that adopted by the Ring of Kerry.

Kerry has an abundance of archaeological sites. The earliest evidence of human settlement dates to the Mesolithic period.[18] The county has a notably high concentration of open-air Atlantic rock art, which is believed to date to the Late Neolithic / Early Bronze Age period (2300-1500BC). This rock art is scattered throughout the county and exists in dense clusters on the Iveragh and Dingle peninsulas. These carvings form part of a tradition which stretches across Atlantic Europe and are distinct from the megalithic art of the type found at Newgrange.[19] Kerry has many Bronze Age monuments including standing stones, wedge tombs, boulder burials, and stone circles, along with Iron Age forts. Like the rest of Ireland, Kerry has large numbers of monuments from the Early Christian period, such as ring forts, churches, cross-inscribed stones, holy wells, saints’ graves, and ogham stones, along with Medieval castles and churches.

Attractions:

Media

County Kerry has two local newspapers, The Kerryman and Kerry's Eye, both published in Tralee.

The county has a commercial radio station, Radio Kerry, which commenced operations in 1990. RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta has a studio in Baile na nGall in the west Kerry gaeltacht.[20] Spin South West has a studio in Tralee, which commenced operations in 2016.

Infrastructure

Road

The main National Primary Routes into Kerry are the N21 road from Limerick and the N22 road from Cork, each terminating in Tralee. Kerry Airport is situated on the N23 road between Castleisland and Farranfore which connects the N21 and N22. Within Kerry the main National Secondary Routes include the well-known Ring of Kerry which follows the N70 road that circles the Iveragh Peninsula and links at Kenmare with the N71 road to west Cork. The N86 road connects Tralee with Dingle along the Dingle Peninsula, while the N69 road from Limerick links Listowel and Tralee through north Kerry.

Greenways

There is a developing greenway network across the county. The North Kerry (part of the Great Southern Trail), South Kerry and Tralee-Fenit greenways are under-development or in the planning phases.

Rail

 
Killarney railway station

Kerry is served by rail at Tralee railway station, Farranfore railway station, Killarney railway station and Rathmore railway station which connect to Cork and Dublin Heuston, via Mallow.

Branch line services existed to each of the peninsulas (Beara, Iveragh and Dingle) and also to the north of the county. They were closed during the rationalisations of the 1950s and 1960s.

  • Tralee and Dingle Light Railway: a narrow-gauge railway that closed in July 1953.
  • Kenmare via Headford Junction: (8 miles outside Killarney) closed in early 1960.[21]
  • Valentia Harbour via Farranfore: also closed in early 1960.[citation needed] The Gleesk Viaduct near Kells, the viaduct at Killorglin, and many other structures on the line still exist.
  • Listowel was served via the North Kerry line, which extended from Tralee to Limerick. Passenger service ceased in 1963, freight in 1983 and the lines were pulled up in 1988.
  • Fenit was served via a branch off the North Kerry line until 1978; the rails are still in place.

Listowel to Ballybunion had the distinction of operating experimental Lartigue Monorail services from 1882 to 1924. A 500m section was re-established in 2003. A road-car route, the Prince of Wales Route, was a link from Bantry to Killarney, operated by the Cork, Bandon and South Coast Railway as a service for tourists.

Bus

Bus Éireann operates an extensive bus service network on routes throughout the county, with connection hubs in Killarney and Tralee.

Air

 
Kerry Airport

Kerry Airport is located at Farranfore in the centre of the county and has operated scheduled services since 1989. Destinations served as of 2014 are London (Stansted & Luton), Frankfurt-Hahn Airport, Faro, Portugal and Alicante all operated by Ryanair. Aer Lingus Regional also operate an all-year-round service to Dublin. The airport is served by Farranfore railway station.

Sea

 
Fenit Marina

Fenit harbour near Tralee is a regional harbour capable of handling ships of up to 17,000 tonnes. Large container cranes from Liebherrs in Killarney are regularly exported worldwide. A rail-link to the port was closed in the 1970s. The harbour at Dingle is one of Ireland's secondary fishing ports[citation needed].[22] In the north of the county, a ferry service operates from Tarbert to Killimer in County Clare.

Hospitals

Hospitals in Kerry include the public University Hospital Kerry which is the second-largest acute hospital in the Health Service Executive South Region. It serves as the main hospital for County Kerry and also serves the people in parts of north Cork and west Limerick. Other hospitals include the private Bon Secours Hospital in Tralee and community hospitals in Cahirciveen, Dingle, Kenmare, Killarney and Listowel.

Education

The Institute of Technology, Tralee (IT Tralee), soon to be merged into Munster Technological University (MTU), is the main third-level institution in the county. It was established in 1977 as the Regional Technical College, Tralee but acquired its present name in 1997. It has an enrolment of about 3,500 students. The institute has two campuses: the North campus (opened in Dromtacker in 2001) and the South campus (opened in Clash in 1977) approximately 2.4 km (1.5 mi) apart.

Septs, families, and titles

A number of Irish surnames are derived from septs who hail from the Kerry area, such as Falvey, Foley, McCarthy, Murphy, O'Connor, O'Moriarty, Clifford, Kennelly, McGrath, O'Carroll, O'Sullivan, O'Connell, O'Donoghue, O'Shea, Quill, Scannell, Stack, Sugrue and Tangney.

The area was also home to the Hiberno-Norman families, the FitzMaurices and the Desmonds, a branch of the FitzGeralds.

Titles in the British Peerage of Ireland with a family seat in Kerry are

Viscount Valentia appears to have been associated with lands in County Armagh, rather than Kerry.

People

See also

References

  1. ^ "Kerry - Topographical Dictionary of Ireland (1837)". www.libraryireland.com. from the original on 21 June 2019. Retrieved 21 June 2019.
  2. ^ "The History Press | Kerry: A kingdom worthy of the name". www.thehistorypress.co.uk. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
  3. ^ "Geographic Changes - CSO". Central Statistics Office. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  4. ^ Corry, Eoghan (2005). The GAA Book of Lists. Hodder Headline Ireland. pp. 186–191.
  5. ^ "Rainfall – Climate – Met Éireann – The Irish Meteorological Service Online". Met.ie. from the original on 2 June 2007. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  6. ^ Census for post 1821 figures 9 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine. For 1653 and 1659 figures from Civil Survey Census of those years, Paper of Mr Hardinge to Royal Irish Academy 14 March 1865.t For a discussion on the accuracy of pre-famine census returns see JJ Lee, "On the accuracy of the Pre-famine Irish censuses Irish Population, Economy and Society" edited by JM Goldstrom and LA Clarkson (1981) p.54, and also "New Developments in Irish Population History, 1700–1850" by Joel Mokyr and Cormac O Grada in The Economic History Review, New Series, Vol. 37, No. 4 (Nov. 1984), pp. 473–488.
  7. ^ "Census 2016 Sapmap Area: County Kerry". Central Statistics Office (Ireland). from the original on 28 October 2018. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  8. ^ T J Barrington, Discovering Kerry, its History Heritage and toponymy, Dublin, 1976
  9. ^ Gearrfhoclóir Gaeilge-Béarla, Dublin, 1981
  10. ^ Mary Tossell. "History, Geography, Facts about County Kerry". Rootsweb.ancestry.com. from the original on 14 April 2012. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  11. ^ Listowel and its Vicinity. Anthony Gaughan. 1973.
  12. ^ . Kerry County Council. Archived from the original on 27 April 2011. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  13. ^ "S.I. No. 51/2014 - County of Kerry Local Electoral Areas and Municipal Districts Order 2014". Irish Statute Book. Office of the Attorney General. from the original on 19 May 2014. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  14. ^ . Cumann Lúthcleas Geal. Archived from the original on 23 August 2008. Retrieved 26 September 2008.
  15. ^ . gaainfo.com. Archived from the original on 14 March 2009. Retrieved 26 September 2008.
  16. ^ Browne, P. J. (11 June 2018). "In Pictures: Scenery Of Kerry Cricket Ground Will Make You Pick Up A Bat". www.balls.ie. from the original on 28 January 2021. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  17. ^ "Oideachas Trí Mheán na Gaeilge in Éirinn sa Ghalltacht 2010–2011" (PDF) (in Ga). gaelscoileanna.ie. 2011. (PDF) from the original on 19 April 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
  18. ^ Bennett, I. (1987). "The Archaeology of County Kerry" Archaeology Ireland, 1(2), 48-51. Retrieved 17 June 2021, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/20558252 29 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Bradley, R. 1997. "Signing the Land; Rock Art and the Prehistory of Atlantic Europe", Routledge, London.
  20. ^ "Labhair Linn". RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta. from the original on 27 December 2010. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  21. ^ "Kenmare's Last Train – Amharc Éireann: Eagrán 32". 18 July 2016. On the 1st of February 1960, Kenmare locals and railway workers looked on as the last train made its final journey on the tracks before the line closed
  22. ^ "Kerry". Welcome To Ireland. from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  23. ^ "Mark Lanegan Reflects on a Prolific Literary Year, Leaving the U.S. Due to the Pandemic". Spin. 23 December 2020. Retrieved 18 March 2021.

External links

  • Gaelscoil stats
  • Ring of Kerry Tourism

county, kerry, kerryman, redirects, here, newspaper, kerryman, irish, contae, chiarraí, county, ireland, southern, region, province, munster, named, after, ciarraige, lived, part, present, county, population, county, 2022, census, contae, chiarraícountycoat, a. Kerryman redirects here For the newspaper see The Kerryman County Kerry Irish Contae Chiarrai is a county in Ireland It is in the Southern Region and the province of Munster It is named after the Ciarraige who lived in part of the present county 2 The population of the county was 155 258 at the 2022 census 3 County Kerry Contae ChiarraiCountyCoat of armsNickname The KingdomMotto s Comhar Cabhair Cairdeas Irish Co operation Help Friendship Location in IrelandCoordinates 52 10 N 9 45 W 52 167 N 9 750 W 52 167 9 750 Coordinates 52 10 N 9 45 W 52 167 N 9 750 W 52 167 9 750CountryIrelandProvinceMunsterRegionSouthernEstablishedc 1300 1 County townTraleeGovernment Local authorityKerry County Council Dail EireannKerry European ParliamentSouthArea Total4 807 km2 1 856 sq mi Rank5thHighest elevation Carrauntoohil 1 039 m 3 409 ft Population 2022 Total155 258 Rank 16th Density32 km2 84 sq mi Time zoneUTC 0 WET Summer DST UTC 1 IST Eircode routing keysV23 V31 V92 V93 primarily Telephone area codes064 066 068 primarily Vehicle indexmark codeKYWebsiteOfficial websiteA popular tourist destination Kerry s geography is defined by the MacGillycuddy s Reeks mountains the Dingle Iveragh and Beara peninsulas and the Blasket and Skellig islands It is bordered by County Limerick to the north east and Cork County to the south and south east Contents 1 Geography and subdivisions 1 1 Baronies 1 2 Most populous towns 1 3 Physical geography 1 4 Climate 2 History 2 1 Lordship of Ireland 2 2 Kingdom of Ireland 2 3 The Famine 2 4 War of Independence and Civil War 3 Local government 3 1 County council 3 2 Town councils 4 Parliamentary representation 5 Culture 6 Sport 6 1 Gaelic games 6 2 Association football 6 3 Cricket 7 Irish language 8 Places of interest 9 Media 10 Infrastructure 10 1 Road 10 1 1 Greenways 10 2 Rail 10 3 Bus 10 4 Air 10 5 Sea 10 6 Hospitals 10 7 Education 11 Septs families and titles 12 People 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksGeography and subdivisions EditKerry is the fifth largest of Ireland s 32 traditional counties by area and the sixteenth largest by population 4 It is the second largest of Munster s six counties by area and the fourth largest by population Uniquely it is bordered by only two other counties County Limerick to the east and County Cork to the south east The county town is Tralee although the Catholic diocesan seat is Killarney which is one of Ireland s most famous tourist destinations The Lakes of Killarney an area of outstanding natural beauty are located in Killarney National Park The Reeks District is home to Carrauntoohil Ireland s highest mountain at 1 039m The tip of the Dingle Peninsula is the westernmost point of Ireland Baronies Edit There are nine historic baronies in the county 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 The Three Sisters West Kerry Clanmaurice Clann Mhuiris Corkaguiny Corca Dhuibhne Dunkerron North Dun Ciarain Thuaidh Dunkerron South Dun Ciarain Theas Glanarought Gleann na Ruachtai Iraghticonnor Oireacht Ui Chonchuir Iveragh Peninsula Uibh Rathach Magunihy Maigh gCoinchinn Trughanacmy Triucha an AicmeMost populous towns Edit See also List of towns and villages in County Kerry Rank Town Population 2016 census 1 Tralee 23 6912 Killarney 14 5043 Listowel 4 8204 Castleisland 2 4865 Kenmare 2 3766 Killorglin 2 1997 Dingle 2 0508 Ballybunion 1 4139 Cahersiveen 1 041Physical geography Edit Near Teeravane County Kerry Kerry faces the Atlantic Ocean and typically for an Eastern Atlantic coastal region features many peninsulas and inlets principally the Dingle Peninsula the Iveragh Peninsula and the Beara Peninsula The county is bounded on the west by the Atlantic Ocean and on the north by the River Shannon Kerry is one of the most mountainous regions of Ireland and its three highest mountains Carrauntoohil Beenkeragh and Caher all part of the MacGillycuddy s Reeks range Just off the coast are a number of islands including the Blasket Islands Valentia Island and the Skelligs Skellig Michael is a World Heritage Site famous for the medieval monastery clinging to the island s cliffs The county contains the extreme west point of Ireland Dunmore Head on the Dingle Peninsula or including islands Tearaght Island part of the Blaskets The most westerly inhabited area of Ireland is Dun Chaoin on the Dingle Peninsula The River Feale the River Laune and the Roughty River flow through Kerry into the Atlantic Dingle Peninsula Climate Edit The North Atlantic Current part of the Gulf Stream flows north past Kerry and the west coast of Ireland resulting in milder temperatures than would otherwise be expected at the 52 North latitude This means that subtropical plants such as the strawberry tree and tree ferns not normally found in northern Europe thrive in the area Because of the mountainous area and the prevailing southwesterly winds Kerry is among the regions with the highest rainfall in Ireland Owing to its location there has been a weather reporting station on Valentia for many centuries The Irish record for rainfall in one day is 243 5 mm 9 59 in recorded at Cloore Lake in Kerry in 1993 5 In 1986 the remnants of Hurricane Charley crossed over Kerry as an extratropical storm causing extensive rainfall flooding and damage History EditHistorical populationYearPop 14616 173 14716 212 0 6 15006 331 1 9 15106 355 0 4 15156 404 0 8 15306 445 0 6 15356 616 2 7 15506 888 4 1 15556 923 0 5 15806 970 0 7 15857 032 0 9 16007 085 0 8 16107 111 0 4 16117 180 1 0 16137 212 0 4 16167 445 3 2 16217 616 2 3 16317 710 1 2 16417 955 3 2 16457 999 0 6 16518 045 0 6 16538 210 2 1 16598 390 2 2 1821216 185 2476 7 1831263 126 21 7 1841293 880 11 7 1851238 254 18 9 1861201 800 15 3 1871196 586 2 6 1881201 039 2 3 1891179 136 10 9 1901165 726 7 5 1911159 691 3 6 1926149 171 6 6 1936139 834 6 3 1946133 893 4 2 1951126 644 5 4 1956122 072 3 6 1961116 458 4 6 1966112 785 3 2 1971112 772 0 0 1979120 356 6 7 1981122 770 2 0 1986124 159 1 1 1991121 894 1 8 1996126 130 3 5 2002132 527 5 1 2006139 835 5 5 2011145 502 4 1 2016147 707 1 5 2022155 258 5 1 6 7 Kerry Irish Ciarrai or in the original old Irish language reform spelling Ciarraighe means the people of Ciar which was the name of the Gaelic tribe who lived in part of the present county The legendary founder of the tribe was Ciar son of Fergus mac Roich 8 In Old Irish Ciar meant black or dark brown and the word continues in use in modern Irish as an adjective describing a dark complexion 9 The suffix raighe meaning people tribe is found in various ry place names in Ireland such as Osry Osraighe Deer People Tribe The county s nickname is the Kingdom 10 Lordship of Ireland Edit On 27 August 1329 by Letters Patent Maurice FitzGerald 1st Earl of Desmond was confirmed in the feudal seniority of the entire county palatine of Kerry to him and his heirs male to hold of the Crown by the service of one knight s fee In the 15th century the majority of the area now known as County Kerry was still part of the County Desmond the west Munster seat of the Earl of Desmond a branch of the Hiberno Norman FitzGerald dynasty known as the Geraldines Kingdom of Ireland Edit Gallarus Oratory near Dingle which dates back to the 6th century Little Skellig as seen from Skellig Michael In 1580 during the Second Desmond Rebellion one of the most infamous massacres of the Sixteenth century the Siege of Smerwick took place at Dun an oir near Ard na Caithne Smerwick at the tip of the Dingle Peninsula The 600 strong Italian Spanish and Irish papal invasion force of James Fitzmaurice Fitzgerald was besieged by the English forces and massacred In 1588 when the fleet of the Spanish Armada in Ireland were returning to Spain during stormy weather many of its ships sought shelter at the Blasket Islands and some were wrecked During the Nine Years War Kerry was again the scene of conflict as the O Sullivan Beare clan joined the rebellion In 1602 their castle at Dunboy was besieged and taken by English troops Donal O Sullivan Beare in an effort to escape English retribution and to reach his allies in Ulster marched all the clan s members and dependants to the north of Ireland Due to harassment by hostile forces and freezing weather very few of the 1 000 O Sullivans who set out reached their destination In the aftermath of the War much of the native owned land in Kerry was confiscated and given to English settlers or planters The head of the MacCarthy Mor family Florence MacCarthy was imprisoned in London and his lands were divided between his relatives and colonists from England such as the Browne family In the 1640s Kerry was engulfed by the Irish Rebellion of 1641 an attempt by Irish Catholics to take power in the Protestant Kingdom of Ireland The rebellion in Kerry was led by Donagh McCarthy 1st Viscount Muskerry His son the Earl of Clancarty held the county during the subsequent Irish Confederate Wars and his forces were among the last to surrender to the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland in 1652 The last stronghold to fall was Ross Castle near Killarney The Famine Edit In the 18th and 19th centuries Kerry became increasingly populated by poor tenant farmers who came to rely on the potato as their main food source As a result when the potato crop failed in 1845 Kerry was very hard hit by the Great Irish Famine of 1845 49 In the wake of the famine many thousands of poor farmers emigrated to seek a better life in America and elsewhere Kerry was to remain a source of emigration until recent times up to the 1980s Another long term consequence of the famine was the Land War of the 1870s and 1880s in which tenant farmers agitated sometimes violently for better terms from their landlords War of Independence and Civil War Edit Ross Castle and Lough Leane Killarney National Park In the 20th century Kerry was one of the counties most affected by the Irish War of Independence 1919 21 and Irish Civil War 1922 23 In the war of Independence the Irish Republican Army fought a guerilla war against the Royal Irish Constabulary and British military One of the more prominent incidents in the conflict in Kerry was the siege of Tralee in November 1920 when the Black and Tans placed Tralee under curfew for a week burned many homes and shot dead a number of local people in retaliation for the IRA killing of five local policemen the night before Another was the Headford Junction ambush in spring 1921 when IRA units ambushed a train carrying British soldiers outside Killarney About ten British soldiers three civilians and two IRA men were killed in the ensuing gun battle Violence between the IRA and the British was ended in July 1921 but nine men four British soldiers and five IRA men were killed in a shoot out in Castleisland on the day of the truce itself indicating the bitterness of the conflict in Kerry Following the Anglo Irish Treaty most of the Kerry IRA units opposed the settlement One exception existed in Listowel where a pro Treaty garrison was established by local Flying Column commandant Thomas Kennelly in February 1922 This unit consisted of 200 regular soldiers along with officers and NCOs A batch of rifles machine guns and a Crossley tender were sent from Dublin Listowel would remain a base for those supporting the treaty throughout the conflict 11 The town was eventually overcome by superior numbers of anti Treaty forces belonging to the Kerry No 2 and 3 Brigades in June 1922 In the ensuing civil war between pro and anti treaty elements Kerry was perhaps the worst affected area of Ireland Initially the county was held by the Anti Treaty IRA but it was taken for the Irish Free State after seaborne landings by National Army troops at Fenit Tarbert and Kenmare in August 1922 Thereafter the county saw a bitter guerilla war between men who had been comrades only a year previously The republicans or irregulars mounted a number of successful actions for example attacking and briefly re taking Kenmare in September 1922 In March 1923 Kerry saw a series of massacres of republican prisoners by National Army soldiers in reprisal for the ambush of their men the most notorious being the killing of eight men with mines at Ballyseedy near Tralee The internecine conflict was brought to an end in May 1923 as the rule of law was re established following the death of IRA Chief of Staff Liam Lynch and the order by Frank Aiken to dump all arms Local government EditCounty council Edit Main article Kerry County Council The principal local authority is Kerry County Council The council provides a number of services including planning roads maintenance fire brigade council housing water supply waste collection recycling and landfill higher education grants and funding for arts and culture 12 Town councils Edit An additional tier of local government existed in the three largest towns in the county Killarney Listowel and Tralee until the 2014 local elections were held on 23 May 2014 These elections were held following the changes effected by the Local Government Reform Act 2014 The act abolished town councils and introduced municipal districts County Kerry was divided into four municipal districts which are identical with the local electoral areas LEA used for election of Councillors 13 Parliamentary representation EditFollowing boundary changes in 2016 Kerry is represented in Dail Eireann by five TDs returned from a single parliamentary constituency The TDs elected to the 33rd Dail Eireann at the 2020 general election included Pa Daly SF Norma Foley FF Brendan Griffin FG Danny Healy Rae Independent and Michael Healy Rae Independent citation needed Culture EditAs a region on the extremity of Ireland the culture of Kerry was less susceptible to outside influences and has preserved the Irish language as well as Irish traditional music song and dance The Sliabh Luachra area of northeast Kerry that borders Limerick and Cork is renowned for its traditional music dance and song especially its slides polkas and fiddle playing The Siamsa Tire centre in Tralee is a hub of traditional Irish pastimes Corca Dhuibhne and Uibh Rathach are considered Gaeltacht regions and Irish culture is also very strong in these areas The Blasket Islands off the Dingle Peninsula are known for their rich literary heritage authors such as Peig Sayers Muiris o Suilleabhain and Tomas o Criomhthain have all written books about life on the islands which were evacuated in 1953 due to increasingly extreme weather conditions that made them uninhabitable John B Keane a native of Listowel is considered one of Ireland s greatest playwrights and is known for his works such as The Field Sive and Big Maggie The annual Listowel Writers Week Festival serves as a celebration of Irish writers past and present Sport EditGaelic games Edit Kerry is known for its senior Gaelic football team Gaelic football is by far the dominant sport in the county and Kerry has the most successful of all football teams the Kerry footballers have won the Sam Maguire cup 38 times with the next nearest team Dublin on 30 wins 14 Hurling is popular at club level in north Kerry although the county has only won one All Ireland Senior Hurling Championship in 1891 The senior team currently compete in the Joe McDonagh Cup 15 Association football Edit The Kerry District League is the main competition for association football in the county Tralee Dynamos have represented Kerry in the A Championship while they and Killarney Celtic also competed in the Munster Senior League during the late 1990s and early 2000s Cricket Edit Cricket is played in County Kerry by County Kerry Cricket Club They play their home games at the Oyster Oval near Tralee 16 Irish language EditIn 2011 there were 6 083 Irish language speakers in County Kerry with 4 978 native speakers within the Kerry Gaeltacht This does not count the 1 105 attending the four Gaelscoils Irish language primary schools and two Gaelcholaiste Irish language secondary schools outside the Kerry Gaeltacht 17 Places of interest EditSee also List of castles in County Kerry Lakes of Killarney Cliffs in West Co Kerry Kerry with its mountains lakes and nearly 1 000 kilometres of Atlantic coastline is among the most scenic areas in Ireland and is among the most significant tourist destinations in Ireland Killarney is the centre of the tourism industry which is a significant element of the economy in Kerry The Kerry Way Dingle Way and Beara Way are walking routes in the county The Ring of Kerry on the Iveragh Peninsula is a popular route for tourists and cyclists The pedestrian version is the scenic Kerry Way which follows ancient paths generally higher than that adopted by the Ring of Kerry Kerry has an abundance of archaeological sites The earliest evidence of human settlement dates to the Mesolithic period 18 The county has a notably high concentration of open air Atlantic rock art which is believed to date to the Late Neolithic Early Bronze Age period 2300 1500BC This rock art is scattered throughout the county and exists in dense clusters on the Iveragh and Dingle peninsulas These carvings form part of a tradition which stretches across Atlantic Europe and are distinct from the megalithic art of the type found at Newgrange 19 Kerry has many Bronze Age monuments including standing stones wedge tombs boulder burials and stone circles along with Iron Age forts Like the rest of Ireland Kerry has large numbers of monuments from the Early Christian period such as ring forts churches cross inscribed stones holy wells saints graves and ogham stones along with Medieval castles and churches Attractions Ballinskelligs Banna Strand Blasket Islands Blennerville Windmill Caragh Lake Carrauntoohil Conor Pass Dingle Peninsula Eightercua Ecclesiastical sites at Ardfert Fenit Harbour Gallarus Oratory Killarney National Park Kerry County Museum Kerry Woollen Mills Lakes of Killarney Lartigue Monorail Maharees Mount Brandon Muckross House Rattoo Round Tower and Sheela na Gig Ring of Kerry Ross Castle Rossbeigh beach Scotia s Grave Siamsa Tire Skellig Michael Torc Waterfall Uragh Stone Circle Valentia IslandMedia EditCounty Kerry has two local newspapers The Kerryman and Kerry s Eye both published in Tralee The county has a commercial radio station Radio Kerry which commenced operations in 1990 RTE Raidio na Gaeltachta has a studio in Baile na nGall in the west Kerry gaeltacht 20 Spin South West has a studio in Tralee which commenced operations in 2016 Infrastructure EditRoad Edit The main National Primary Routes into Kerry are the N21 road from Limerick and the N22 road from Cork each terminating in Tralee Kerry Airport is situated on the N23 road between Castleisland and Farranfore which connects the N21 and N22 Within Kerry the main National Secondary Routes include the well known Ring of Kerry which follows the N70 road that circles the Iveragh Peninsula and links at Kenmare with the N71 road to west Cork The N86 road connects Tralee with Dingle along the Dingle Peninsula while the N69 road from Limerick links Listowel and Tralee through north Kerry Greenways Edit There is a developing greenway network across the county The North Kerry part of the Great Southern Trail South Kerry and Tralee Fenit greenways are under development or in the planning phases Rail Edit Killarney railway station Kerry is served by rail at Tralee railway station Farranfore railway station Killarney railway station and Rathmore railway station which connect to Cork and Dublin Heuston via Mallow Branch line services existed to each of the peninsulas Beara Iveragh and Dingle and also to the north of the county They were closed during the rationalisations of the 1950s and 1960s Tralee and Dingle Light Railway a narrow gauge railway that closed in July 1953 Kenmare via Headford Junction 8 miles outside Killarney closed in early 1960 21 Valentia Harbour via Farranfore also closed in early 1960 citation needed The Gleesk Viaduct near Kells the viaduct at Killorglin and many other structures on the line still exist Listowel was served via the North Kerry line which extended from Tralee to Limerick Passenger service ceased in 1963 freight in 1983 and the lines were pulled up in 1988 Fenit was served via a branch off the North Kerry line until 1978 the rails are still in place Listowel to Ballybunion had the distinction of operating experimental Lartigue Monorail services from 1882 to 1924 A 500m section was re established in 2003 A road car route the Prince of Wales Route was a link from Bantry to Killarney operated by the Cork Bandon and South Coast Railway as a service for tourists Bus Edit Bus Eireann operates an extensive bus service network on routes throughout the county with connection hubs in Killarney and Tralee Air Edit Kerry Airport Kerry Airport is located at Farranfore in the centre of the county and has operated scheduled services since 1989 Destinations served as of 2014 are London Stansted amp Luton Frankfurt Hahn Airport Faro Portugal and Alicante all operated by Ryanair Aer Lingus Regional also operate an all year round service to Dublin The airport is served by Farranfore railway station Sea Edit Fenit Marina Fenit harbour near Tralee is a regional harbour capable of handling ships of up to 17 000 tonnes Large container cranes from Liebherrs in Killarney are regularly exported worldwide A rail link to the port was closed in the 1970s The harbour at Dingle is one of Ireland s secondary fishing ports citation needed 22 In the north of the county a ferry service operates from Tarbert to Killimer in County Clare Hospitals Edit See also List of hospitals in the Republic of Ireland Hospitals in Kerry include the public University Hospital Kerry which is the second largest acute hospital in the Health Service Executive South Region It serves as the main hospital for County Kerry and also serves the people in parts of north Cork and west Limerick Other hospitals include the private Bon Secours Hospital in Tralee and community hospitals in Cahirciveen Dingle Kenmare Killarney and Listowel Education Edit The Institute of Technology Tralee IT Tralee soon update to be merged into Munster Technological University MTU is the main third level institution in the county It was established in 1977 as the Regional Technical College Tralee but acquired its present name in 1997 It has an enrolment of about 3 500 students The institute has two campuses the North campus opened in Dromtacker in 2001 and the South campus opened in Clash in 1977 approximately 2 4 km 1 5 mi apart Septs families and titles EditA number of Irish surnames are derived from septs who hail from the Kerry area such as Falvey Foley McCarthy Murphy O Connor O Moriarty Clifford Kennelly McGrath O Carroll O Sullivan O Connell O Donoghue O Shea Quill Scannell Stack Sugrue and Tangney The area was also home to the Hiberno Norman families the FitzMaurices and the Desmonds a branch of the FitzGeralds Titles in the British Peerage of Ireland with a family seat in Kerry are the Knight of Kerry a branch of Fitzgeralds who had lands at Valentia Island the Earl of Kenmare also Viscount Castlerosse Viscount Kenmare and Baron Castlerosse the descendants of Sir Valentine Browne who was awarded lands in Killarney the Earl of Desmond the Fitzgeralds of Desmond who had lands in North Kerry until they were seized at the end of the Desmond Rebellions the Marquess of Lansdowne also Earl of Shelburne Baron Dunkeron the descendants of Sir William Petty who was awarded lands in Kenmare and elsewhere the Earl of Kerry also Baron Kerry Viscount Clanmaurice the Fitzmaurice family the Earl of Listowel the Hare family the Baron Ventry the Mullins family who had lands in the Dingle Peninsula including VentryViscount Valentia appears to have been associated with lands in County Armagh rather than Kerry People EditAssociated People Roger Casement Wolfe Tone Cearbhall o DalaighHistorical Daniel O Connell Thomas Ashe Annie Chemis Tom Crean Con Cremin Austin Stack Horatio Kitchener Richard Kelliher Jennifer Musa Charlie Daly Maurice Moynihan Patrick Edward Connor William Melville Richard Cantillon John Connors Saint Brendan Trevor Chute Literary amp Musical Con Houlihan Thomas O Brien Butler Malachi Martin Julia Clifford Jerome Connor Canon James Goodman John B Keane Brendan Kennelly Denis Murphy Thomas MacGreevy Ernest John Moeran Paula Murrihy Tomas o Criomhthain Eoghan Rua o Suilleabhain Padraig O Keeffe Arthur O Leary Muiris o Suilleabhain Aogan o Rathaille Peig Sayers Larry Mathews Christie Hennessy John Moriarty Paddy Cronin Patrick S Dinneen Mark Lanegan 23 Sport Danny Barnes Edward Barrett John Barrett Colm Cooper Patrick Clifford Jack Doyle Mick Doyle Maurice Fitzgerald Tony Flavin Thos Foley Paul Galvin Mick Galwey JJ Hanrahan David Higgins Liam Higgins Robert Hilliard Moss Keane Tadhg Kennelly Jerry Kiernan John Lawlor Jack McKenna Bryan Cooper Ultan Dillane Mick O Connell Mick O Dwyer Gillian O Sullivan Paul Griffin Darragh o Se Pat Spillane Jack O Shea Mark O Connor Tommy Walsh Sean Wight Film Stage Radio Michael Fassbender Eamon Kelly Fodhla Cronin O Reilly Richard Wall Jessie Buckley Timothy V MurphyPolitical Martin Ferris Jackie Healy Rae Joe Higgins Thomas O Driscoll Dick SpringFashion Don O NeillSee also EditWild Atlantic WayReferences Edit Kerry Topographical Dictionary of Ireland 1837 www libraryireland com Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2019 The History Press Kerry A kingdom worthy of the name www thehistorypress co uk Retrieved 8 October 2022 Geographic Changes CSO Central Statistics Office Retrieved 11 July 2022 Corry Eoghan 2005 The GAA Book of Lists Hodder Headline Ireland pp 186 191 Rainfall Climate Met Eireann The Irish Meteorological Service Online Met ie Archived from the original on 2 June 2007 Retrieved 23 May 2012 Census for post 1821 figures Archived 9 March 2005 at the Wayback Machine For 1653 and 1659 figures from Civil Survey Census of those years Paper of Mr Hardinge to Royal Irish Academy 14 March 1865 t For a discussion on the accuracy of pre famine census returns see JJ Lee On the accuracy of the Pre famine Irish censuses Irish Population Economy and Society edited by JM Goldstrom and LA Clarkson 1981 p 54 and also New Developments in Irish Population History 1700 1850 by Joel Mokyr and Cormac O Grada in The Economic History Review New Series Vol 37 No 4 Nov 1984 pp 473 488 Census 2016 Sapmap Area County Kerry Central Statistics Office Ireland Archived from the original on 28 October 2018 Retrieved 27 October 2018 T J Barrington Discovering Kerry its History Heritage and toponymy Dublin 1976 Gearrfhocloir Gaeilge Bearla Dublin 1981 Mary Tossell History Geography Facts about County Kerry Rootsweb ancestry com Archived from the original on 14 April 2012 Retrieved 23 May 2012 Listowel and its Vicinity Anthony Gaughan 1973 All Services Kerry County Council Archived from the original on 27 April 2011 Retrieved 11 February 2011 S I No 51 2014 County of Kerry Local Electoral Areas and Municipal Districts Order 2014 Irish Statute Book Office of the Attorney General Archived from the original on 19 May 2014 Retrieved 19 May 2014 Roll of Honour Cumann Luthcleas Geal Archived from the original on 23 August 2008 Retrieved 26 September 2008 Kerry GAA Hurling Clubs and Information gaainfo com Archived from the original on 14 March 2009 Retrieved 26 September 2008 Browne P J 11 June 2018 In Pictures Scenery Of Kerry Cricket Ground Will Make You Pick Up A Bat www balls ie Archived from the original on 28 January 2021 Retrieved 21 January 2021 Oideachas Tri Mhean na Gaeilge in Eirinn sa Ghalltacht 2010 2011 PDF in Ga gaelscoileanna ie 2011 Archived PDF from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 9 January 2012 Bennett I 1987 The Archaeology of County Kerry Archaeology Ireland 1 2 48 51 Retrieved 17 June 2021 from http www jstor org stable 20558252 Archived 29 June 2021 at the Wayback Machine Bradley R 1997 Signing the Land Rock Art and the Prehistory of Atlantic Europe Routledge London Labhair Linn RTE Raidio na Gaeltachta Archived from the original on 27 December 2010 Retrieved 19 December 2010 Kenmare s Last Train Amharc Eireann Eagran 32 18 July 2016 On the 1st of February 1960 Kenmare locals and railway workers looked on as the last train made its final journey on the tracks before the line closed Kerry Welcome To Ireland Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 30 January 2017 Mark Lanegan Reflects on a Prolific Literary Year Leaving the U S Due to the Pandemic Spin 23 December 2020 Retrieved 18 March 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to County Kerry Gaelscoil stats Gaeltacht Comprehensive Language Study 2007 Ring of Kerry Tourism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title County Kerry amp oldid 1151215496, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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