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Location |
The Parish of Lusmagh lies beside the Shannon river, to the south of Banagher, in the County of Offaly. Across the river is the County of Galway. Bounded on three sides by rivers (Shannon, Lusmagh River and Little Brosna), Lusmagh is almost an island. |
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Meaning |
The word "Lusmagh" means "Plain (Magh) of Herbs (Lus)," and is very ancient. | ||||
Alternative Names |
In Christian times, the parish was named Cill Mochonna (the Church of Mochonna), after Saint Mochonna. Little is known about this saint, but a lot of local lore exists about another saint, viz., Saint Crónán, who founded a monastery in the parish that survived for many centuries (and several other monasteries elsewhere). The name Lusmagh was restored to the Parish around 1810. The present R.C. parish church is named after St. Crónán. |
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Relation with Galway |
Although situated in County
Offaly, this area has traditionally great ties with County Galway. Today, we tend to say
that it is separated from County Galway by the river Shannon. However, in former
centuries, when travel by water was often more convenient than travel over land, perhaps
the Shannon water was more of a unifying than a dividing influence. One way or
another, the connection with County Galway stretches back into pre-history and continues
to this day. Lusmagh Parish is in the Diocese of Clonfert, a Galway Diocese. |
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Medieval History |
Though situated to the east (i.e., Offaly side)
of the Shannon River, Lusmagh formed part of the kingdom of the O'Maddens of East Galway. When King John of England divided Ireland into counties, Lusmagh was included, accordingly, in County Galway. The claim of the O'Maddens to Lusmagh was contested by the MacCoughlans of Offaly, and was eventually detached from County Galway and joined to County Offaly. The O'Maddens of Lusmagh were reduced from being chieftains to mere tenants in the time of Cromwell. Like other tenants they became freeholders of small holdings under the Land Purchase Acts at the beginning of this century. The last surviving male O'Madden of Lusmagh died in July 1999. |
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The Planting of Lusmagh |
Under the Cromwellian
plantation, (in 1654), Lusmagh was granted to 4 Cromwellian soldiers. (Cromwell paid his
army by confiscating land held by Catholics and regranting it to his soldiers, most of
whom resold it to speculators, who became the new land-owners of Ireland). After the
Restoration of the Stuarts, part of Lusmagh, including Cloghan Castle, was granted by
Charles II to Irish chieftain Garrett Moore, the Moores having lost their traditional
lands in County Laois. The O'Moores were good landlords and tried their best to alleviate the suffering of their tenants in the Great Famine of 1845 to 1847. As a result of the Famine, the Moores became bankrupt and had to sell the lands. They were bought by Dr Robert Graves, (discoverer of Grave's Disease, Exopthalmic Goitre), whose widow evicted about 100 tenants. |
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The Land War and its Resolution |
While, under English law, the
land was owned by the landlords, the tenants were the successors of the people who
occupied the land since time immemorial, and regarded themselves as having a right to the
land. The 19th century evictions in Ireland led to agrarian unrest, the formation of the
Land League, the "Land War", and eventual government capitulation to the demand
"The land of Ireland for the People of Ireland." The land of Lusmagh was eventually taken over by the Land Commission, and divided among the local tenant farmers around 1910. |
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Father Fahy and Lia Fail |
In de Valera's Ireland, there existed a social objective of increasing the size of small farms to 40 acres, which was considered sufficient to provide a family with a comfortable, if frugal, livelihood. Father John Fahy, parish priest of Lusmagh from 1945 to 1959, sought to continue the Land War until this aim should be attained in Lusmagh. An organisation called Lia Fáil was established and campaigned for the division of the larger cattle ranches among the small farmers. Father Fahy coined the phrase "The land for the people and the bullock for the road." The movement fizzled out when compensation against damage suffered by the cattle ranchers was levied on the population of Lusmagh through increases in their rates. Of course, mechanisation of farming since then has done away with mixed farming, and 40 acres is no longer sufficient. | ||||
Cloghan Castle |
Cloghan Castle in Lusmagh is the oldest inhabited
castle in Ireland. Built by the O'Maddens in 1120, it fell into the hands of the McCoughlans, who added a fortress and withstood the Normans. Later, it was retaken by the O'Maddens. The McCoughlans, O'Maddens and Moores, (when not warring with each other), intermarried, as was custom between adjoining celtic chieftains. In 1595, English troops, under Sir William Russell, the Lord Deputy, took the castle from O'Madden and put all the occupants to death. 46 defenders were thrown to their death from the battlements. More about Cloghan Castle: http://www.excel.net/~dcoughla/rip.html |
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The Traditional Sports of Lusmagh |
Hurling (a team sport,
something like hockey, where a small, stuffed leather ball, called a sliotar, is
struck by ash sticks of a special shape) is the traditional sport of the parish, whereas
most of the rest of the county prefers football. The modern game of hurling has teams of
15, and is played on a pitch similar to a footbal pitch, but the traditional game had
several different formats and teams of different sizes, sometimes involving all the
able-bodied men of a parish, and ranging over the countryside. In Celtic and Norman times
the sport was played by professionals, sponsored by noble families. In the 19th Century, the ash plant had another use: faction fighting was popular (see the "Battle of Banagher" below). With its rivers, bogs and marshes, fishing, boating, hunting and wild-fowl shooting were always popular. Shooting has now largely been replaced by bird-watching. |
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The Callows |
The meadows along the bank of the Shannon are known as the "Callows", (from the Irish word "Cala" which means a riverside meadow). These lands are flooded in winter. Since the land has to dry out before the grass can be harvested, the callows are cut late in the summer. For this reason, the corncrake, which has become extinct in the rest of Europe, survives in the callows of Lusmagh. | ||||
"The Lusmagh Fields so Green" |
In 1908, Edward Dolan, 20 years
old, left Lusmagh as an emigrant to Australia. On the long journey to Australia, he wrote
a song about the pain of emigration and of parting from his native land, which he enclosed
with his first, and only, letter home. He was never heard from again, but his song is
remembered and sung wherever Lusmagh people get together. Out of respect to his copyright,
I reproduce here only one verse of the song: "In London Town I
do lie down upon my bed to sleep, |
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The Battle of Banagher |
Rivalry between the rural parish of Lusmagh and
the town of Banagher goes back centuries to the medieval territorial disputes between the
McCoughlans of Offaly and the O'Maddens of County Galway. This rivalry probably
intensified during the British occupation of Ireland, when there was an English garrison
in Banagher. The sport of faction fighting which took hold of Ireland in the early19th
century provided an outlet for physical expression of this historic rivalry. On 4th of January, 1814, the Lusmagh men served notice of their intention of beating Banagher, i.e., a notice to the following effect (according to Patrick O'Donnell in the parish magazine, The Lusmagh Herb: The Annals of a Country Parish, 1982) was posted prominently in the town: "We, the parishioners of Lusmagh give notice to the town of Banagher that we will go in on Thursday next and give them battle. Every man jack from 12 to 60 will turn out. We defy the best yeomen of Captain Armstrong. We will disarm them and take the town. Let ye rue the hour that we go in." On the day, (6th January), at least 500 Lusmagh men, armed with sticks and stones, marched on the town in columns. At 9 o'clock in the morning they came face to face with the Banagher men, drawn up in lines on the main street, and the battle was quickly joined. Yeomen, out of uniform, participated on the Banagher side. Eventually, British soldiers, in their bright red uniforms, intervened and placed themselves between the two factions. However, the Lusmagh men broke through the military line and resumed the fight. Captain Armstrong marched a detachment of the 12th regiment to the scene and ordered them to fire on the Lusmagh men. Three Lusmagh men were shot dead and 5 were wounded. The fighting stopped immediately, and the Banagher people joined the Lusmaghs in doing what they could for the casualties. Thus, a good day's sport of stick fighting and stone throwing ended in tragedy. The actions of Armstrong and the soldiers was illegal, since troops were not permitted by law to fire on civilians without the Riot Act first being read, which was not done. However, in the enquiries that followed the incident, the culprits were white-washed, as was customary in relation to acts of the occupying forces in Ireland. |
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Lusmagh Placenames(Coming Soon) |
The Townlands of Lusmagh | Some subsidiary, or local, placenames in the townlands of Lusmagh | The Islands of Lusmagh | The Bridges of Lusmagh | Locks, Weirs, Harbours and other river-bank features |
Sources |
The main source of material on this page is a parish magazine issued in 1982 entitled The Lusmagh Herb: The Annals of a Country Parish. | ||||
The Herbs of Lusmagh |
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The Power of the Lusmagh Herbs |
The Book of the Invasions, (rewritten in
the 12th century from texts dating from the 8th or 9th century which recorded the oral
tradition), recounts how the Tuatha Dé Danaan (People of the God Dana)
used Lusmagh herbs to help them secure victory over the Fir Bolg (Bag People) and
the Fomorians. Each day after the fighting, during the battles of Moytura, the wounded warriors of the Tuatha Dé Danaan bathed in herbal baths prepared with herbs collected in Lusmagh. The healing powers of these herbs restored the health and strength of the warriors, and contributed to the eventual victory. In the first battle of Moytura the Tuatha Dé Danaan defeated the Fir Bolg. In the second battle of Moytura, they defeated the giant Fomorians, led by Balor of the Evil Eye, in the same battle field. Moytura lies in County Galway, near its border with Mayo and at a considerable distance from the Shannon and Lusmagh. This story evidences both the antiquity of the reputation of the herbs of Lusmagh and the antiquity of the connection between Lusmagh and County Galway. |
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The Battles of Moytura |
An account of the battles of
Moytura, together with archaeological research on the site of the battle, (which gives
credence to the ancient account), are found on the Web at: http://www.wombat.ie/galwayguide/history/wrwilde/chapt7.html. The Fir Bolg marched to the battle field in columns, holding their shields over their heads. This formation was called tura, hence the name of the battle field: "the Plain of the Tura columns." |
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Nuada of the Silver Arm |
Nuada, the king of the Tuatha Dé
Danaan, lost his arm in the first battle of Moytura. However, his artificer, Credne,
fashioned for him an arm of silver, and his surgeon, Diancecht, attached this to
him with magical skill. His son, Miach, applied a potent essence of Lusmagh
leaves to the silver arm. This embued it with life, so that he was able to use it like a
normal arm. Henceforth, he became known as Nuada of the Silver Arm. Of course, we, at the dawning of the 21st century, are quite certain that the physicians of prehistory did not have the skills to accomplish such wonderful acts of surgery. Was there, therefore, no truth in the story? The celtic tradition that a king must be sound of mind and body, (which forced the retirement of kings who lost a limb in battle), appears to have applied to the older peoples, such as the Fir Bolg and the Tuatha Dé Danaan as well as to the later Milesians. When Nuada lost the arm, he had to renounce kingship, and could only be restored when the people were persuaded that his arm had been restored. The fashioning of a bronze and silver arm was no doubt within the capabilities of the craftsmen of the time. (Rich hoards of gold and silver objects dating to the Bronze Age, actually called the First Golden Age of Ireland, have been found). It was not necessary (I would say) for the arm actually to have the functionality of a normal arm: it was sufficient that it appeared to do so. It appears that the druids and people were united in their desire to restore Nuada as king. The silver arm was sufficient, for this reason, to technically satisfy the rule. The historical record, composed by the official poets and committed to memory in verse form, would recount only the official version, i.e., that the silver arm had all the functionality of a real arm, even though the actuality was that the silver arm was but a trick to satisfy the rule of soundness of body. |
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Herbs of Deerpark Hill |
Wild herbs can still be found in Lusmagh, and grow in particular profusion in and around Deerpark Hill. The following are the most common found there, although the ancients may have used many more, collected from other parts of the parish, also. (Source: Father Thomas J. Kennedy P.P., in the parish magazine, The Lusmagh Herb: The Annals of a Country Parish, 1982). | |
The Herbs of Lusmagh |
Plantain | That troublesome lawn-weed. Used on external wounds for its astringent qualities. |
| Yarrow | Staunches bleeding. | |
| Rue | A seasoning for food as well as an astringent medicine. | |
| Field Garlic | Copious healing powers, internal and external, anti-septic and anti-biotic. This variety has long leaves like a daffodil and pinkish-brown flowers. | |
| Crow Garlic | Similar healing powers, with long hollow cylindrical leaves, like scallions, and greenish or pinkish flowers. | |
| Ramsons (allium ursinum) | A prolific garlic. White flowers and broad flat leaves. Found carpeting the floor of deciduous woodlands. Imparts an odour and flavour of garlic to the milk of cows that eat it. | |
| Arum Maculatum (cuckoo pint, Lords and Ladies or Parson-in-the-Pulpit) | Leaves shaped like the Easter Lily, with a similar flower except that the white part is hooded. | |
| Marsh cudweed (Filaginella Uliginosa), known in Lusmagh as "Carpenters' Herb" | Beneficial to cattle to "restore their
cud", hence the name "cudweed." Has a small white flower similar to
bogcotton, hence its Irish name "ceannabhán beag" (small bogcotton). Plucked between Lady Days, 15th August and 8th September, it will stop bleeding, even in deep wounds caused by carpenters' tools. (Like alum, it stops the bleeding by constricting the blood vessels). Was used in Lusmagh up to the beginning of the 20th century. |
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Offaly Links |
Offaly Historical & Archaeological Society: www.offalyhistory.com | Holiday Ireland: East: Offaly: http://www.holiday-ireland.com/East/Offaly/index.html |
| Irish Midlands Ancestry www.irishmidlandsancestry.com | Irish Family History Foundation: http://www.irishroots.net/LaoisOff.htm | |
| Information about Offaly: http://www.rootsweb.com/~fianna/county/offaly.html | Cloghan Castle: http://www.excel.net/~dcoughla/rip.html |