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O'Donovan family

The O'Donovans are an Irish family. Their patronymic surname derives from Irish Ó Donnabháin, meaning the grandsons or descendants of Donnubán, referring to the 10th century ruler of the Uí Fidgenti, Donnubán mac Cathail. During the 12th and 13th century, O'Donovan relations relocated from the Bruree/Croom area south to the Kingdom of Desmond and to Carbery, where they were a ruling family for centuries and played a role in the establishment of a feudal society under the MacCarthys. Other septs retreated into the southeast corner of the Ui Fidgheinte territory, reaching from Broadford/Feenagh to the Doneraile area. The northern septs of the O'Donovans did not use a White Rod as the family's position in their original territory was vastly eroded, while several septs of O'Donovans in the southwest territories were semi-autonomous flatha under the MacCarthy Reagh dynasty in Carbery, with the most notable being local petty kings.[3] The family were counted among the leading Gaelic nobility of Ireland.

Ó Donnabháin
Parent house
CountryIreland
TitlesAncient:
  • King of Uí Fidgenti
  • King of Uí Cairbre Áebda
  • King of Ressad[2]

Later sept titles:

Foundation edit

According to historian C. Thomas Cairney, the O'Donovans were one of the chiefly families of the Uí Fidgenti who were a tribe of the Erainn who were the second wave of Celts to settle in Ireland between about 500 and 100 BC.[4]

The Donovans were an ancient Gaelic Irish sept, ÓDonnubán; anglicised O'Donovan. The Clans can be traced back to the descendants of the 10th century Donnubán mac Cathail (t980), son of Cahall, ruler of the Irish regional or sub-provincial kingdom of Ui-Fidgenti. The Ui-Fidgheinte reached from Muscry Ganogh, west of Kilmallock through the plains of the Shannon, and included Adare, Askearton, Croom, Bruree and [Newcastle] Kenry. Donnubán mac Cathail, Lord of Uí Fidgenti married the daughter of his norse ally[citation needed], Ivar of Limerick of the Uí Ímair. His son Cathal mac Donnubán also ruled the smaller kingdom of Uí Chairbre Áebda. From Donnubán mac Cathail accession to the kingship in 962 to the death of Amlaíb Ua Donnubáin in 1201, the family operated as a semi-independent to sometimes fully independent regional ruling house within the kingdom of Munster.

Two Carberys edit

An ancient race in Munster, a portion of the O'Donovans became Cairbre Eva (or Uí Chairpre, see map) within the ancient regional kingdom of the Uí Fidgenti, once approximately co-extensive with the modern County Limerick,[5] and were for many centuries allies of the Eóganachta, to whom they were related by common descent from Ailill Flann Bec (or Ailill Aulom). Although allowed to be princely in multiple ancient sources,[6] in the Irish class structure the Uí Fidgenti were only middle tier among the ruling septs of the land, as they never contested for the kingship of the greater provincial kingdom of Munster, in which they were located. However, the Uí Fidgenti did not pay tribute to the Eóganachta kings of Cashel.[7] The Book of Rights,[8] transcribed as a medieval topographical poem set forth the rights of the O'Donovans:[9]

Dual d O Donnabáin Dhúin Cuirc
an tír si, na tír longphuirt;
fa leis gan cíos fon Maigh moill,
is na cláir síos co Sionoinn.

Hereditary to O Donnabhain of Dun Cuirc
Is this land, as a land of encampment;
To him, without tribute, belonged [the land] along the sluggish Maigh.
And the plains down to the Sionainn.

Their extensive territory followed Limerick's River Maigue, before the Dál gCais and O'Brien dynasty, and later the FitzGerald dynasty, forced them out of their territory between the late 12th and mid-13th century. O'Donovans were noted as taking refuge in 1169 in County Kerry, but were also noted as being in their historical territory near Bruree and Croom in the mid-1200s. The relocation of some O'Donovans to Carbery in the later County Cork, appears to have occurred during the mid to late 13th century, primarily through their association with the MacCarthy Reagh sept. The majority of O'Donovans were associated with the MacCarthy Reagh sept, although considerable documentation exists that some O'Donovans maintained relations with groups hostile to the MacCarthy Reaghs, including other MacCarthy septs (MacCarthy Mor and MacCarthy of Muscry) and Anglo-Irish rulers (Earls of Desmond and Kildare). Only the O'Donovan chiefs of territories south of Kilmallock were inaugurated by the MacCaarthy Reagh; the O'Donovan chiefs of Bruree and territories north of Kilmallock were inaugurated by their Fidgheinte kinsmen.[10] The O'Donovans in Carbery may have been joined by a junior sept of their Ó Coileáin kinsmen from Uí Chonaill Gabra. A large number of O'Donovans of Carbery and Cork may also descend from the Dunavans of the Corca Laidghe, which was a completely different, and perceived as inferior (less royal) race than the descendants of Eoghan Mor.

Later, the title Prince of Carbery (Cairbre) would be adopted by the MacCarthy Reaghs, although there is significant doubt as to whether this is actually derived from the former tribal name of the O'Donovans (Ui Chairpre of the Ui Fidgente), and if so, then what circumstances led to it being extended well beyond the territories belonging to the O'Donovans. In any case, the Carberry septs of the Donovans were junior to the MacCarthy Reaghs, from whom they received the White Wand. The leading family of the Carbery O'Donovans, Clann Cathail, paid to their overlords a surprisingly small, economically insignificant rent, but the precise reason for this is lost to history.[11] Possibly earlier times were recalled, or it may be due to the special relationship they developed with Fíngin Reanna Róin Mac Carthaig (see below).

Reverend John Begley (see references), of St. Munchin's, gives an account of the Christianization of the Norse of Limerick by the O'Donovans, and their long intermarriage. Mainchín of Limerick is the patron saint of the Diocese of Limerick and Bruree, and he may have been adopted by the Norse of Limerick city from the family. Begley argues that he was, but the O'Briens also claimed him indirectly at some point and obviously have their own supporters.

The longphorts were the Viking ship fortresses and later settlements, although the term soon enough came to mean simply encampment. However, the original meaning remained in usage and in the 10th century there were at least two Norse longphuirt, extensions of Limerick, which were deep in Uí Chairpre controlled territory.[12]

Many Irish families intermarried with the Scandinavians, but it was a question of degree. In their case the O'Donovans simply took a particularly large dose. Nearly all of the long history of the Danes in Munster has been lost, although those living in Uí Chairpre are not known to have left, being last noted in Donnubán's company in 978.[13] The later advent of the Norman invasion of Ireland ruined them as a political class. For the fate of the Limerick Norse see History of Limerick. Only the Cotter family of East Cork continue to prosper today in Ireland,[14] but they are not of Limerick provenance.

From the later 16th century Scandinavian names have been very little used by the O'Donovan family, when once they were as popular as the Gaelic. But see the important Ímar Ua Donnubáin.

Final ancient deeds edit

The O'Donovans are first found associated with the MacCarthys only four years after the death of Amlaíb. The Annals of Inisfallen report that in 1205[15]

AI1205.3: Cellachán son of Mac Carthaig, i.e. the son of Cathal Odar, was slain by the mounted horse of Domnall, son of Mac Carthaig, i.e. by the followers of Donnocán and by Ua Donnubáin of Uí Chairpri.

The political influence of the O'Donovans with the Ui Chairbre decreased as the Mac Carthy influence increased, and then splintered. By 1232, certain septs of the MacCarthys ruled from where they had relocated to the south of the historical territory of the Ui Fidghente, and controlled the Ui Chairbre. In 1260 the O'Donovans are found raiding Norman lands alongside none other than Fíngin Reanna Róin Mac Carthaig, according to Norman documents. This was one year before his famous victory at the Battle of Callann, where the O'Donovans of Ui Chairbre are also believed to have been at his side.[16] In 1259 he aided them in a fight against the O'Mahonys, who appear to have been blamed for the slaying of Crom Ua Donnubáin.[17]

Up until this period the O'Donovans and O'Mahonys are generally regarded to have been allies, their ancestors Máel Muad mac Brain and Donnubán having joined forces against the Dál gCais in the 10th century. In 1283, following an attempted coup within the MacCarthy, a number of MacCarthys and some O'Donovans migrated into new territory adjacent to the O'Sullivans, which commenced a long and tumultuous relationship between O'Donovans and both major septs of the O'Sullivans, and which has included both minor warfare as well as intermarriage over the next four centuries.

Later history edit

 
Carbery in Tudor times

Following an active 13th century, and after their move south the O'Donovans of Ui Chairbre fall into relative obscurity for approximately two centuries, primarily because the records for .Munster during this period are few. Fragmenting into several smaller-sized lordships, they became subordinate to their overlord, MacCarthy Reagh, who was at odds with the MacCarthy Mor, who was at odds with the MacCarthys of Muscrery, who were at odds with both the Norman settlers (Barrys) and the old Irish (O'Callahan, O'Keefe), and with Gaelicized English (Fitzgeralds- Earls of Desmonds, FitzGibbons – Earls of Kildare and the White Knight), all of whom were or were not, depending on changing politics, at odds with the English monarchs.

O'Donovans of Ui Chairpre reappeared in various annals and records about 1500. Domhnall Ó Donnabháin was Bishop of Ross in the mid-late 15th century, while Donal mac Melaghlin O'Donovan, was killed for piracy, along with his O'Driscoll accomplices, by the lords of the O'Driscolls in 1551.[18]

However, despite similar obscurity for an extended period, an O'Donovan sept (the remnants of the Ui Donabhain of the Ui Fidghente, holding territory in Synnagh-Donovan near Doneraile, were still counted among the 64 leading Gaelic families in all of Ireland in the mid-16th century Book of Howth list, with their Chief noted as being the Chief Irish of his countrie (i.e. region).[19]

Clancahill edit

Following the migration of some of the O'Donovans of the Ui Chairpre into Cork and the death of Ancrom O'Donovan in 1254, few Munster records survived which provides information on the history of the Ui Chairpre O'Donovans for the next three centuries. But when they reappear in the mid-16th century they are found in a similar state as other septs in Ireland at that time: rival branches assassinating each other and each supported by more distantly related septs. It appears that by a fortuitous marriage to an O'Leary of Carrignacurra and the ardent support of Clan Aneslis that the branch of the celebrated Donal of the Hides were able to set aside their rivals, in the person of Diarmaid an Bhairc ("Dermot of the Bark", meaning born at sea), who were supported by Ire (Ivor) O'Donovan [Ó Donnabháin Íomhair] of the Sliocht Íomhair ("Seed of Ivor"), descendants of the legendary Ímar Ua Donnubáin, younger son of Cathal, and also by the Sliocht Tioboit ("Seed of Toby"), another distinguished sept of Clancahill. In a terrible local conflict occurring in Rosscarbery in 1560, where Diarmaid was being inaugurated with the White Wand by the MacCarthy Reagh, Donal, with Clan Aneslis and a contingent of O'Learys, stormed the town, slaying Diarmaid and a great number of the Sliocht Íomhair at the start, and others of his followers were soon found and slaughtered in the streets of the town. The MacCarthy Reagh, who would have been Cormac na Haoine MacCarthy Reagh, 10th Prince of Carbery, then inaugurated Donal na g crocieann with the White Rod, declaring him "O'Donovan", after he had just run his kinsman Diarmaid through. The story has significant doubt as to its veracity, though John O'Donovan considered it "probably true".

Ellen O'Leary and Donal na g crocieann (of the Hides) were married at Dromale, and their issue was, among other sons, Donal II O'Donovan.

Recent generations of Clancahill include Morgan William II O'Donovan and his son Morgan John Winthrop. His son Morgan Gerald Daniel O'Donovan[20] (Murchadh Gearóid Dónal Ó Donnabháin) was born in Pau, France, in 1931, died 25 January 2016, was the son of Morgan John Winthrop O'Donovan by his wife Cornelia Bagnell (died 1974). Educated at Stowe and Trinity College, Cambridge, O'Donovan resided near Skibbereen, in West Cork. O'Donovan was a member of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland, and served as Chairman of the Standing Council of Irish Chiefs and Chieftains. He was married to Frances Jane, daughter of the late Sir Gerald Templer, with whom his father served in the Royal Irish Fusiliers. They have issue: a son, Morgan Teige Gerald (born 1961), educated at Harrow and Girton College, Cambridge and two daughters, Katharine Jane (born 1962) and Cecilia Mary Cornelia (born 1966) [married N.G.F. Chamberlain, 1996 and has issue].

O'Donovan served on the Council with O'Donoghue of the Glens, McGillycuddy of the Reeks, O'Callaghan (Tortosa), Baron Inchiquin and O'Grady, the last his distant cousin. O'Callaghan and O'Donoghue are much more distant cousins through the MacCarthys. O'Donovan was profiled and interviewed by Ellis, Curley, and Chambers, for which see the list of references below.

Clanloughlin and Ballymore edit

These O'Donovans are notable for many accomplishments. An important junior sept, the Donovans of Ballymore, established themselves in County Wexford. Many have distinguished themselves in political office and the military.

The current representative of Clan Loughlin and the Ballymore sept is the scholar Brian Donovan of Trinity College, Dublin, a descendant of Donal Oge na Cartan O'Donovan, Lord of Clan Loughlin (died 1629). He is the CEO and co-founder of the historical research company Eneclann, based at Trinity.[21]

Sliocht Aineislis edit

Territory in Carbery edit

Between them, Clancahill and Clan Loughlin controlled the entire harbour of Glandore, the former on the west side and the latter on the east, although before the 1560s the Clancahill portion appears to have been controlled by the Sliocht Íomhair. Clan Loughlin were seated at Cloghatradbally, now called Glandore Castle, a 13th-century Norman castle built by the Barretts, from whom they took it. This is the sacred harbour of Clíodhna.

Clancahill came to control half of Castlehaven harbour as well, the ancient O'Driscolls of Corcu Loígde in control of the other. From the ocean the territory of the O'Donovans then stretched north and northwest into the area of Drimoleague, with the well known Castle Donovan found in a valley not far from that village. This, up in the mountains, in a remote area, was the principal seat of the Clancahill main line until the early 17th century.

At what was probably their height in Carbery, between the late 16th century and their partial dispossession following the so-called Irish rebellion of 1641 and the Irish Confederate Wars in the mid 17th, the O'Donovans were in control of approximately 100,000 acres right in the center of the principality, with territories both in West and East Carbery. Of this, however, only around 15,000 acres were usable as farmland. In the remaining they were still owed rents and had the rights to hold court(s), fairs, and so on. From the several harbours and bays they controlled actually came their chief income, which was the case for lords all along the South Munster coast. Following the Cromwellian confiscations, the infamously ungrateful Charles II of England, after first giving his deceitful word he would restore them entirely, granted the vast majority to soldiers of Cromwell's army in lieu of pay. The O'Donovans would regain possession of less than one twentieth their former territories, a few thousand acres... although this was better than many Gaelic families did. The great MacCarthys Reagh lost virtually everything, receiving not enough back to even live on respectably, a few hundred acres out of the approaching 600 square miles (1,600 km2) they once controlled at their height (this included the O'Donovan territories, which were at one time probably much less than 100,000 acres), so they eventually left.

Clanlouglin lost their estates twice, first the majority of the fairly immense Manor of Glandore in the 1650s to Cromwell and his soldiers, and then the Manor of the Leap, a descendant of the remains of the former, in 1737, when one of their dynasts, Jeremiah II O'Donovan, sold it.

In 1878 various branches of the O'Donovan family were reported successful (landed) and in possession of 17,213 acres of estates in several counties in southern Ireland,[22] not counting estates and homesteads of less than 500 acres. By this time Donovans were well established in England, Australia, Canada, Argentina and the United States.

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ From which devolved various septs of the Uí Chairpre Áebda, specifically the Ceinel Laippe, to whom Donnuban is believed to have belonged. See Máire Herbert and Pádraig Ó Riain (eds. & trs.), Betha Adamnáin: The Irish Life of Adamnán. Irish Texts Society 54. 1988.
  2. ^ Donnubán's final style in the Annals of Inisfallen at his death in 980. This was an ancient city in County Limerick, now identified with the late Iron Age Reerasta (Ri Ressad) Rath right next to the much larger bronze age Ballylin complex. See also Ardagh Hoard and Colmán of Cloyne.
  3. ^ Dillon, Myles, "The consecration of Irish kings", in Celtica 10 (1973): 1–8. Dillon refers to O'Donovan as a petty king under MacCarthy. See also Elizabeth FitzPatrick, Royal Inauguration in Gaelic Ireland, passim.
  4. ^ Cairney, C. Thomas (1989). Clans and Families of Ireland and Scotland. Jefferson, North Carolina, United States, and London: McFarland & Company. pp. 61, 71. ISBN 0899503624.
  5. ^ Begley
  6. ^ See Charles-Edwards.
  7. ^ See Byrne.
  8. ^ O'Huidhrin, Topeg. Poems, page 119
  9. ^ [1] pp. 118–9
  10. ^ Irish Family History by Richard Cronnelly,p 253
  11. ^ Butler, "The Barony of Carbery"
  12. ^ Valante, Mary A., The Vikings in Ireland: Settlement, Trade and Urbanization. Four Courts Press. 2008.
  13. ^ Annals of the Four Masters and Cogad Gáedel re Gallaib
  14. ^ Ó Murchadha, p. 261
  15. ^ Annals of Inisfallen
  16. ^ Ó Murchadha, p. 125
  17. ^ Mac Carthaigh's Book and Annals of Inisfallen
  18. ^ Ó Murchadha, p. 126
  19. ^ Book of Howth, p. 255
  20. ^ The O'Donovan, Independent.ie, Sunday 14 January 2007, accessed Wednesday 3 March 2010
  21. ^ Eneclann
  22. ^ The Landowners of Ireland, pp. 348, 133

General references edit

  • Begley, John, The Diocese of Limerick, Ancient and Medieval. Dublin: Browne & Nolan. 1906.
  • Bugge, Alexander (ed. & tr.), Caithreim Cellachain Caisil: The Victorious Career of Cellachan of Cashel. Christiania: J. Chr. Gundersens Bogtrykkeri. 1905.
  • Burke, Bernard, and Hugh Montgomery-Massingberd, Burke's Irish Family Records, or Burke's Landed Gentry of Ireland. London: Burke's Peerage Ltd. 5th edition, 1976.
  • Burke, J. M., "Carbery Topographical Notes", in Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society Volume X. Second Series. 1904. pp. 204–7.
  • Burke, J. M., "Kilmacabea, Co. Cork", in Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society Volume X. Second Series. 1904. pp. 213–30.
  • Butler, W. F. T., "The Barony of Carbery", in Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society Volume X. Second Series. 1904. pp. 1–10, 73–84.
  • Byrne, Francis J., Irish Kings and High-Kings. Four Courts Press. 2nd revised edition, 2001.
  • Carroll, Michael J. and Alan Langford (illus.), The Castles and Fortified Houses of West Cork. Bantry Design Studios. 2001.
  • Chambers, Anne, At Arm's Length: Aristocrats in the Republic of Ireland. New Island Books. 2nd revised edition, 2005.
  • Charles-Edwards, T. M., Early Christian Ireland. Cambridge University Press. 2001.
  • Cronnelly, Richard F., Irish Family History, Part II: A History of the Clan Eoghan, or Eoghanachts. Dublin: 1864. (O'Donovan pedigrees: pgs. 252-64)
  • Curley, Walter J. P., Vanishing Kingdoms: The Irish Chiefs and their Families. Dublin: Lilliput Press. 2004.
  • Cusack, Mary Francis, A History of the City and County of Cork. Dublin: McGlashan and Gill. 1875.
  • D'Alton, John, Illustrations, Historical and Genealogical, of King James's Irish Army List, 1689. Volume II. London: J.R. Smith. 2nd edition, 1861.
  • Downham, Clare, Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland: The Dynasty of Ívarr to A.D. 1014. Edinburgh: Dunedin Academic Press. 2007.
  • Ellis, Peter Berresford, Erin's Blood Royal: The Gaelic Noble Dynasties of Ireland. Palgrave. Revised edition, 2002.
  • FitzPatrick, Elizabeth, Royal Inauguration in Gaelic Ireland c. 1100–1600: A Cultural Landscape Study. Boydell Press. 2004.
  • Ó Corráin, Donnchadh, "Caithréim Chellacháin Chaisil: History or Propaganda?", in Ériu 25 (1974): 1–69.
  • O'Donovan, John (ed. & tr.), Annala Rioghachta Eireann. Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters, from the Earliest Period to the Year 1616. 7 vols. Dublin: Royal Irish Academy. 2nd edition, 1856. Volume VI (pp. 2430–83)
  • O'Donovan, John (ed. & tr.) and Duald Mac Firbis, The Genealogies, Tribes, and Customs of Hy-Fiachrach, Commonly Called O'Dowda's Country. Dublin: Irish Archæological Society. 1844.
  • O'Donovan, Miriam, A Short History of the O'Donovan Clan: stair agus seanchas mhuintir Uí Dhonnabháin. Publisher: O'Donovan Clan. 2000.
  • O'Donovan, Peadar, Irish Family Names. Skibbereen: Southern Star Newspaper. 1991. (many O'Donovan septs and nicknames included)
  • O'Hart, John, Irish Pedigrees; or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation. 5th edition, 1892.
  • Ó Murchadha, Diarmuid, Family Names of County Cork. Cork: The Collins Press. 2nd edition, 1996.
  • Todd, James Henthorn (ed. & tr.), Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh: The War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill. Longmans. 1867.
  • Ua Súilleabháin, Seán and Seán Donnelly (eds. & trans.), and Tadhg Olltach Ó an Cháinte, "Music Has Ended: The Death of a Harper", in Celtica 22. Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. 1991. pp. 165–75.
  • Westropp, Thomas Johnson, "A Survey of the Ancient Churches in the County of Limerick", in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy Volume XXV, Section C (Archaeology, Linguistic, and Literature). Dublin. 1904–1905. pp. 327–480, Plates X-XVIII.

External links edit

  • The Territory of Thomond discusses the size of the territory of the Kingdom of Uí Fidgenti and the O'Donovans
  • Tuadmumu has maps and convenient Uí Fidgenti-related genealogies
  • Tribes & Territories of Mumhan
  • Tracys of the Eóganachta features a very detailed genealogy of the Uí Fidgenti, compiled and translated from numerous primary and secondary sources
  • Ireland circa 1100 A.D. shows the location of the Ua Donnabháin and Uí Chairpre kindred before the time of the Norman Invasion

donovan, family, donovan, redirects, here, other, uses, donovan, disambiguation, donovans, irish, family, their, patronymic, surname, derives, from, irish, donnabháin, meaning, grandsons, descendants, donnubán, referring, 10th, century, ruler, fidgenti, donnub. O Donovan redirects here For other uses see O Donovan disambiguation The O Donovans are an Irish family Their patronymic surname derives from Irish o Donnabhain meaning the grandsons or descendants of Donnuban referring to the 10th century ruler of the Ui Fidgenti Donnuban mac Cathail During the 12th and 13th century O Donovan relations relocated from the Bruree Croom area south to the Kingdom of Desmond and to Carbery where they were a ruling family for centuries and played a role in the establishment of a feudal society under the MacCarthys Other septs retreated into the southeast corner of the Ui Fidgheinte territory reaching from Broadford Feenagh to the Doneraile area The northern septs of the O Donovans did not use a White Rod as the family s position in their original territory was vastly eroded while several septs of O Donovans in the southwest territories were semi autonomous flatha under the MacCarthy Reagh dynasty in Carbery with the most notable being local petty kings 3 The family were counted among the leading Gaelic nobility of Ireland o DonnabhainParent houseUi Fidgenti 1 CountryIrelandTitlesAncient King of Ui Fidgenti King of Ui Cairbre Aebda King of Ressad 2 Later sept titles Lord of Clancahill Lord of Clanloughlin MacEnesles O Donovan of Doneraile O Hea Contents 1 Foundation 2 Two Carberys 2 1 Final ancient deeds 3 Later history 3 1 Clancahill 3 2 Clanloughlin and Ballymore 3 3 Sliocht Aineislis 4 Territory in Carbery 5 See also 6 Citations 7 General references 8 External linksFoundation editAccording to historian C Thomas Cairney the O Donovans were one of the chiefly families of the Ui Fidgenti who were a tribe of the Erainn who were the second wave of Celts to settle in Ireland between about 500 and 100 BC 4 The Donovans were an ancient Gaelic Irish sept oDonnuban anglicised O Donovan The Clans can be traced back to the descendants of the 10th century Donnuban mac Cathail t980 son of Cahall ruler of the Irish regional or sub provincial kingdom of Ui Fidgenti The Ui Fidgheinte reached from Muscry Ganogh west of Kilmallock through the plains of the Shannon and included Adare Askearton Croom Bruree and Newcastle Kenry Donnuban mac Cathail Lord of Ui Fidgenti married the daughter of his norse ally citation needed Ivar of Limerick of the Ui Imair His son Cathal mac Donnuban also ruled the smaller kingdom of Ui Chairbre Aebda From Donnuban mac Cathail accession to the kingship in 962 to the death of Amlaib Ua Donnubain in 1201 the family operated as a semi independent to sometimes fully independent regional ruling house within the kingdom of Munster Two Carberys editAn ancient race in Munster a portion of the O Donovans became Cairbre Eva or Ui Chairpre see map within the ancient regional kingdom of the Ui Fidgenti once approximately co extensive with the modern County Limerick 5 and were for many centuries allies of the Eoganachta to whom they were related by common descent from Ailill Flann Bec or Ailill Aulom Although allowed to be princely in multiple ancient sources 6 in the Irish class structure the Ui Fidgenti were only middle tier among the ruling septs of the land as they never contested for the kingship of the greater provincial kingdom of Munster in which they were located However the Ui Fidgenti did not pay tribute to the Eoganachta kings of Cashel 7 The Book of Rights 8 transcribed as a medieval topographical poem set forth the rights of the O Donovans 9 Dual d O Donnabain Dhuin Cuirc an tir si na tir longphuirt fa leis gan cios fon Maigh moill is na clair sios co Sionoinn Hereditary to O Donnabhain of Dun Cuirc Is this land as a land of encampment To him without tribute belonged the land along the sluggish Maigh And the plains down to the Sionainn Their extensive territory followed Limerick s River Maigue before the Dal gCais and O Brien dynasty and later the FitzGerald dynasty forced them out of their territory between the late 12th and mid 13th century O Donovans were noted as taking refuge in 1169 in County Kerry but were also noted as being in their historical territory near Bruree and Croom in the mid 1200s The relocation of some O Donovans to Carbery in the later County Cork appears to have occurred during the mid to late 13th century primarily through their association with the MacCarthy Reagh sept The majority of O Donovans were associated with the MacCarthy Reagh sept although considerable documentation exists that some O Donovans maintained relations with groups hostile to the MacCarthy Reaghs including other MacCarthy septs MacCarthy Mor and MacCarthy of Muscry and Anglo Irish rulers Earls of Desmond and Kildare Only the O Donovan chiefs of territories south of Kilmallock were inaugurated by the MacCaarthy Reagh the O Donovan chiefs of Bruree and territories north of Kilmallock were inaugurated by their Fidgheinte kinsmen 10 The O Donovans in Carbery may have been joined by a junior sept of their o Coileain kinsmen from Ui Chonaill Gabra A large number of O Donovans of Carbery and Cork may also descend from the Dunavans of the Corca Laidghe which was a completely different and perceived as inferior less royal race than the descendants of Eoghan Mor Later the title Prince of Carbery Cairbre would be adopted by the MacCarthy Reaghs although there is significant doubt as to whether this is actually derived from the former tribal name of the O Donovans Ui Chairpre of the Ui Fidgente and if so then what circumstances led to it being extended well beyond the territories belonging to the O Donovans In any case the Carberry septs of the Donovans were junior to the MacCarthy Reaghs from whom they received the White Wand The leading family of the Carbery O Donovans Clann Cathail paid to their overlords a surprisingly small economically insignificant rent but the precise reason for this is lost to history 11 Possibly earlier times were recalled or it may be due to the special relationship they developed with Fingin Reanna Roin Mac Carthaig see below Reverend John Begley see references of St Munchin s gives an account of the Christianization of the Norse of Limerick by the O Donovans and their long intermarriage Mainchin of Limerick is the patron saint of the Diocese of Limerick and Bruree and he may have been adopted by the Norse of Limerick city from the family Begley argues that he was but the O Briens also claimed him indirectly at some point and obviously have their own supporters The longphorts were the Viking ship fortresses and later settlements although the term soon enough came to mean simply encampment However the original meaning remained in usage and in the 10th century there were at least two Norse longphuirt extensions of Limerick which were deep in Ui Chairpre controlled territory 12 Many Irish families intermarried with the Scandinavians but it was a question of degree In their case the O Donovans simply took a particularly large dose Nearly all of the long history of the Danes in Munster has been lost although those living in Ui Chairpre are not known to have left being last noted in Donnuban s company in 978 13 The later advent of the Norman invasion of Ireland ruined them as a political class For the fate of the Limerick Norse see History of Limerick Only the Cotter family of East Cork continue to prosper today in Ireland 14 but they are not of Limerick provenance From the later 16th century Scandinavian names have been very little used by the O Donovan family when once they were as popular as the Gaelic But see the important Imar Ua Donnubain Final ancient deeds edit See also Croom County Limerick and Croom Castle The O Donovans are first found associated with the MacCarthys only four years after the death of Amlaib The Annals of Inisfallen report that in 1205 15 AI1205 3 Cellachan son of Mac Carthaig i e the son of Cathal Odar was slain by the mounted horse of Domnall son of Mac Carthaig i e by the followers of Donnocan and by Ua Donnubain of Ui Chairpri The political influence of the O Donovans with the Ui Chairbre decreased as the Mac Carthy influence increased and then splintered By 1232 certain septs of the MacCarthys ruled from where they had relocated to the south of the historical territory of the Ui Fidghente and controlled the Ui Chairbre In 1260 the O Donovans are found raiding Norman lands alongside none other than Fingin Reanna Roin Mac Carthaig according to Norman documents This was one year before his famous victory at the Battle of Callann where the O Donovans of Ui Chairbre are also believed to have been at his side 16 In 1259 he aided them in a fight against the O Mahonys who appear to have been blamed for the slaying of Crom Ua Donnubain 17 Up until this period the O Donovans and O Mahonys are generally regarded to have been allies their ancestors Mael Muad mac Brain and Donnuban having joined forces against the Dal gCais in the 10th century In 1283 following an attempted coup within the MacCarthy a number of MacCarthys and some O Donovans migrated into new territory adjacent to the O Sullivans which commenced a long and tumultuous relationship between O Donovans and both major septs of the O Sullivans and which has included both minor warfare as well as intermarriage over the next four centuries Later history edit nbsp Carbery in Tudor times Following an active 13th century and after their move south the O Donovans of Ui Chairbre fall into relative obscurity for approximately two centuries primarily because the records for Munster during this period are few Fragmenting into several smaller sized lordships they became subordinate to their overlord MacCarthy Reagh who was at odds with the MacCarthy Mor who was at odds with the MacCarthys of Muscrery who were at odds with both the Norman settlers Barrys and the old Irish O Callahan O Keefe and with Gaelicized English Fitzgeralds Earls of Desmonds FitzGibbons Earls of Kildare and the White Knight all of whom were or were not depending on changing politics at odds with the English monarchs O Donovans of Ui Chairpre reappeared in various annals and records about 1500 Domhnall o Donnabhain was Bishop of Ross in the mid late 15th century while Donal mac Melaghlin O Donovan was killed for piracy along with his O Driscoll accomplices by the lords of the O Driscolls in 1551 18 However despite similar obscurity for an extended period an O Donovan sept the remnants of the Ui Donabhain of the Ui Fidghente holding territory in Synnagh Donovan near Doneraile were still counted among the 64 leading Gaelic families in all of Ireland in the mid 16th century Book of Howth list with their Chief noted as being the Chief Irish of his countrie i e region 19 Clancahill edit Following the migration of some of the O Donovans of the Ui Chairpre into Cork and the death of Ancrom O Donovan in 1254 few Munster records survived which provides information on the history of the Ui Chairpre O Donovans for the next three centuries But when they reappear in the mid 16th century they are found in a similar state as other septs in Ireland at that time rival branches assassinating each other and each supported by more distantly related septs It appears that by a fortuitous marriage to an O Leary of Carrignacurra and the ardent support of Clan Aneslis that the branch of the celebrated Donal of the Hides were able to set aside their rivals in the person of Diarmaid an Bhairc Dermot of the Bark meaning born at sea who were supported by Ire Ivor O Donovan o Donnabhain Iomhair of the Sliocht Iomhair Seed of Ivor descendants of the legendary Imar Ua Donnubain younger son of Cathal and also by the Sliocht Tioboit Seed of Toby another distinguished sept of Clancahill In a terrible local conflict occurring in Rosscarbery in 1560 where Diarmaid was being inaugurated with the White Wand by the MacCarthy Reagh Donal with Clan Aneslis and a contingent of O Learys stormed the town slaying Diarmaid and a great number of the Sliocht Iomhair at the start and others of his followers were soon found and slaughtered in the streets of the town The MacCarthy Reagh who would have been Cormac na Haoine MacCarthy Reagh 10th Prince of Carbery then inaugurated Donal na g crocieann with the White Rod declaring him O Donovan after he had just run his kinsman Diarmaid through The story has significant doubt as to its veracity though John O Donovan considered it probably true Ellen O Leary and Donal na g crocieann of the Hides were married at Dromale and their issue was among other sons Donal II O Donovan Recent generations of Clancahill include Morgan William II O Donovan and his son Morgan John Winthrop His son Morgan Gerald Daniel O Donovan 20 Murchadh Gearoid Donal o Donnabhain was born in Pau France in 1931 died 25 January 2016 was the son of Morgan John Winthrop O Donovan by his wife Cornelia Bagnell died 1974 Educated at Stowe and Trinity College Cambridge O Donovan resided near Skibbereen in West Cork O Donovan was a member of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland and served as Chairman of the Standing Council of Irish Chiefs and Chieftains He was married to Frances Jane daughter of the late Sir Gerald Templer with whom his father served in the Royal Irish Fusiliers They have issue a son Morgan Teige Gerald born 1961 educated at Harrow and Girton College Cambridge and two daughters Katharine Jane born 1962 and Cecilia Mary Cornelia born 1966 married N G F Chamberlain 1996 and has issue O Donovan served on the Council with O Donoghue of the Glens McGillycuddy of the Reeks O Callaghan Tortosa Baron Inchiquin and O Grady the last his distant cousin O Callaghan and O Donoghue are much more distant cousins through the MacCarthys O Donovan was profiled and interviewed by Ellis Curley and Chambers for which see the list of references below Clanloughlin and Ballymore edit These O Donovans are notable for many accomplishments An important junior sept the Donovans of Ballymore established themselves in County Wexford Many have distinguished themselves in political office and the military Jeremiah O Donovan MP Baltimore Juliana Donovan Countess of Anglesey scandalised widow of Richard Annesley 6th Earl of Anglesey Edward Westby Donovan fought in the Crimean War later Commander of British Troops in Hong Kong Chevalier of the Legion d honneur The current representative of Clan Loughlin and the Ballymore sept is the scholar Brian Donovan of Trinity College Dublin a descendant of Donal Oge na Cartan O Donovan Lord of Clan Loughlin died 1629 He is the CEO and co founder of the historical research company Eneclann based at Trinity 21 Sliocht Aineislis edit See also O Donovan RossaTerritory in Carbery editSee also Leap County Cork Between them Clancahill and Clan Loughlin controlled the entire harbour of Glandore the former on the west side and the latter on the east although before the 1560s the Clancahill portion appears to have been controlled by the Sliocht Iomhair Clan Loughlin were seated at Cloghatradbally now called Glandore Castle a 13th century Norman castle built by the Barretts from whom they took it This is the sacred harbour of Cliodhna Clancahill came to control half of Castlehaven harbour as well the ancient O Driscolls of Corcu Loigde in control of the other From the ocean the territory of the O Donovans then stretched north and northwest into the area of Drimoleague with the well known Castle Donovan found in a valley not far from that village This up in the mountains in a remote area was the principal seat of the Clancahill main line until the early 17th century At what was probably their height in Carbery between the late 16th century and their partial dispossession following the so called Irish rebellion of 1641 and the Irish Confederate Wars in the mid 17th the O Donovans were in control of approximately 100 000 acres right in the center of the principality with territories both in West and East Carbery Of this however only around 15 000 acres were usable as farmland In the remaining they were still owed rents and had the rights to hold court s fairs and so on From the several harbours and bays they controlled actually came their chief income which was the case for lords all along the South Munster coast Following the Cromwellian confiscations the infamously ungrateful Charles II of England after first giving his deceitful word he would restore them entirely granted the vast majority to soldiers of Cromwell s army in lieu of pay The O Donovans would regain possession of less than one twentieth their former territories a few thousand acres although this was better than many Gaelic families did The great MacCarthys Reagh lost virtually everything receiving not enough back to even live on respectably a few hundred acres out of the approaching 600 square miles 1 600 km2 they once controlled at their height this included the O Donovan territories which were at one time probably much less than 100 000 acres so they eventually left Clanlouglin lost their estates twice first the majority of the fairly immense Manor of Glandore in the 1650s to Cromwell and his soldiers and then the Manor of the Leap a descendant of the remains of the former in 1737 when one of their dynasts Jeremiah II O Donovan sold it In 1878 various branches of the O Donovan family were reported successful landed and in possession of 17 213 acres of estates in several counties in southern Ireland 22 not counting estates and homesteads of less than 500 acres By this time Donovans were well established in England Australia Canada Argentina and the United States See also editChiefs of the Name Clonakilty Donovan disambiguation Donovan name Irish nobility O Donovan surname Pre Norman invasion Irish Celtic kinship groups from whom many of the modern Irish surnames came fromCitations edit From which devolved various septs of the Ui Chairpre Aebda specifically the Ceinel Laippe to whom Donnuban is believed to have belonged See Maire Herbert and Padraig o Riain eds amp trs Betha Adamnain The Irish Life of Adamnan Irish Texts Society 54 1988 Donnuban s final style in the Annals of Inisfallen at his death in 980 This was an ancient city in County Limerick now identified with the late Iron Age Reerasta Ri Ressad Rath right next to the much larger bronze age Ballylin complex See also Ardagh Hoard and Colman of Cloyne Dillon Myles The consecration of Irish kings in Celtica 10 1973 1 8 Dillon refers to O Donovan as a petty king under MacCarthy See also Elizabeth FitzPatrick Royal Inauguration in Gaelic Ireland passim Cairney C Thomas 1989 Clans and Families of Ireland and Scotland Jefferson North Carolina United States and London McFarland amp Company pp 61 71 ISBN 0899503624 Begley See Charles Edwards See Byrne O Huidhrin Topeg Poems page 119 1 pp 118 9 Irish Family History by Richard Cronnelly p 253 Butler The Barony of Carbery Valante Mary A The Vikings in Ireland Settlement Trade and Urbanization Four Courts Press 2008 Annals of the Four Masters and Cogad Gaedel re Gallaib o Murchadha p 261 Annals of Inisfallen o Murchadha p 125 Mac Carthaigh s Book and Annals of Inisfallen o Murchadha p 126 Book of Howth p 255 The O Donovan Independent ie Sunday 14 January 2007 accessed Wednesday 3 March 2010 Eneclann The Landowners of Ireland pp 348 133General references editBegley John The Diocese of Limerick Ancient and Medieval Dublin Browne amp Nolan 1906 Bugge Alexander ed amp tr Caithreim Cellachain Caisil The Victorious Career of Cellachan of Cashel Christiania J Chr Gundersens Bogtrykkeri 1905 Burke Bernard and Hugh Montgomery Massingberd Burke s Irish Family Records or Burke s Landed Gentry of Ireland London Burke s Peerage Ltd 5th edition 1976 Burke J M Carbery Topographical Notes in Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society Volume X Second Series 1904 pp 204 7 Burke J M Kilmacabea Co Cork in Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society Volume X Second Series 1904 pp 213 30 Butler W F T The Barony of Carbery in Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society Volume X Second Series 1904 pp 1 10 73 84 Byrne Francis J Irish Kings and High Kings Four Courts Press 2nd revised edition 2001 Carroll Michael J and Alan Langford illus The Castles and Fortified Houses of West Cork Bantry Design Studios 2001 Chambers Anne At Arm s Length Aristocrats in the Republic of Ireland New Island Books 2nd revised edition 2005 Charles Edwards T M Early Christian Ireland Cambridge University Press 2001 Cronnelly Richard F Irish Family History Part II A History of the Clan Eoghan or Eoghanachts Dublin 1864 O Donovan pedigrees pgs 252 64 Curley Walter J P Vanishing Kingdoms The Irish Chiefs and their Families Dublin Lilliput Press 2004 Cusack Mary Francis A History of the City and County of Cork Dublin McGlashan and Gill 1875 D Alton John Illustrations Historical and Genealogical of King James s Irish Army List 1689 Volume II London J R Smith 2nd edition 1861 Downham Clare Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland The Dynasty of Ivarr to A D 1014 Edinburgh Dunedin Academic Press 2007 Ellis Peter Berresford Erin s Blood Royal The Gaelic Noble Dynasties of Ireland Palgrave Revised edition 2002 FitzPatrick Elizabeth Royal Inauguration in Gaelic Ireland c 1100 1600 A Cultural Landscape Study Boydell Press 2004 o Corrain Donnchadh Caithreim Chellachain Chaisil History or Propaganda in Eriu 25 1974 1 69 O Donovan John ed amp tr Annala Rioghachta Eireann Annals of the Kingdom of Ireland by the Four Masters from the Earliest Period to the Year 1616 7 vols Dublin Royal Irish Academy 2nd edition 1856 Volume VI pp 2430 83 O Donovan John ed amp tr and Duald Mac Firbis The Genealogies Tribes and Customs of Hy Fiachrach Commonly Called O Dowda s Country Dublin Irish Archaeological Society 1844 O Donovan Miriam A Short History of the O Donovan Clan stair agus seanchas mhuintir Ui Dhonnabhain Publisher O Donovan Clan 2000 O Donovan Peadar Irish Family Names Skibbereen Southern Star Newspaper 1991 many O Donovan septs and nicknames included O Hart John Irish Pedigrees or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation 5th edition 1892 o Murchadha Diarmuid Family Names of County Cork Cork The Collins Press 2nd edition 1996 Todd James Henthorn ed amp tr Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh The War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill Longmans 1867 Ua Suilleabhain Sean and Sean Donnelly eds amp trans and Tadhg Olltach o an Chainte Music Has Ended The Death of a Harper in Celtica 22 Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies 1991 pp 165 75 Westropp Thomas Johnson A Survey of the Ancient Churches in the County of Limerick in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy Volume XXV Section C Archaeology Linguistic and Literature Dublin 1904 1905 pp 327 480 Plates X XVIII External links editThe Territory of Thomond discusses the size of the territory of the Kingdom of Ui Fidgenti and the O Donovans Tuadmumu has maps and convenient Ui Fidgenti related genealogies Tribes amp Territories of Mumhan Tracys of the Eoganachta features a very detailed genealogy of the Ui Fidgenti compiled and translated from numerous primary and secondary sources Ireland circa 1100 A D shows the location of the Ua Donnabhain and Ui Chairpre kindred before the time of the Norman Invasion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title O 27Donovan family amp oldid 1223506139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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