INTRODUCTION
Irish (or Gaelic) is one of the oldest living languages in Europe. It is a
Celtic language and part of the Indo-European family.Irish declined
dramatically as the majority language in Clare and Ireland in the 19th
century.The last
native Irish speaker in County Clare, the seanchaí
(storyteller) Paddy Pháraic Mhichíl, died in Doolin the
early 1990s.
Though dead as a
native language in Clare, Irish is still spoken in the Burren today as a second
language by a small minority of tenacious Irish language enthusiasts.
The Great Hunger of the 1840s saw the disappearance through death and
emigration of up to three million people – mostly native Irish speakers. In the
post-Famine period, a burgeoning Irish middle-class adopted the English
language as a means of advancing themselves within the British administration
in Ireland. Moreover, the same administration conducted a radical and often
brutal programme of linguistic colonisation, most notably through the National
Schools.
The 19th century linguistic imposition also involved family and place names being anglicised.
The placename Glencolmcille comes from the Irish Gleann Cholm Cille meaning the valley of St Colmcille. Glencolmcille is today a sparsely-populated, fertile valley 5.5 kilometres east of Carran, the only village in the Burren hills. An ancient pass ran through the valley in the past providing a critical link between the Burren region and the outside world to the east of it. The importance of this routeway is reflected in the location of many signature sites along it, including four castles in Glencolmcille itself along with an ecclesiastical site of Early Medieval (431-1169) origin. According to tradition, the latter was founded by the renowned monk, Colmcille. The ruin of a church and a graveyard (still in use) stand today on the former ecclesiastical site. The church is considered to date from the 12th century.
Saintesses like Ita, Brigid and Gobnait are in and around Imbolg but Iníon Baoith is an outlier on the calendar. Her patron day is December 29th - round about the winter solstice.
Her cult is strongest in Killinaboy in Clare where amongst other monuments, there are four holy wells dedicated to her.
Toberineenboy (Tobar Inion Baoith) is on commonage in Commons South and is renowned for cure for sore eyes or warts.
‘Tobar
Chornáin, near Black Head.
Perhaps the most decorative of the many wells, holy or otherwise, which dot the
Burren’.
Peadar O’Dowd.
Tobercornan was a natural spring before it was ‘welled’.
One presumes it was welled when it was canopied.
That
happened circa 1860 and so thereafter Gleninagh North had two canopied wells.
The other well is Tobernacrohaneeve, Tobar Na Chroíche Naoimh,
only one km away.
Is Gleninagh North the only townland in all of County Clare with, not one, but
two canopied wells?
Officially known as Tobercornan, Tobar Chornáin.
Now commonly known as
the Pinnacle Well.
Discounted by some as not being holy historically though Cooke did state in the
1840s that ‘The neighbouring peasantry call it a Blessed Well.’
The location is Creehaun (Killinaboy), one of 64,000 plus townlands in Ireland. Creehaun measures almost 270 hectares and it does not have a single inhabitant. The place name is a mangling of Crítheán , a bushy place
The big water body is a dramatic winter merger of three lakes - Loch Sceach Ard (high bush lake), Loch Trá Bhán (white strand lake) and Loch Cúil Úrta (damp wood lake).
The three most easterly peaks beyond the water make up the Turloughmore range - a seldom-trod part of the National Park. The heights are 200m, 224m and 267m.
Stone, water, uplands... but the star of the show is the 'candy floss' - cumulus fractus.
Fractus clouds have this jagged, shredded appearance as they are seared by strong winds. They are indicators of fair weather and do not contain precipitation. (Thanks to Nick Geh for the identification).
Il Blu Depinto di Blu is the title of a song more commonly known as 'Volare' written by Domenico Modugno and released in 1958. Domenico died in 1994 but his song has not ended. A presto!
The less well known of the two St Flannan's Wells in Inagh, County Clare. Flannan being the patron saint of the parish of Inagh. Flannan's day is over - just. It falls on December 18th. "If a person went on the eighteenth of December he would not have to go anymore." (Schools Collection Vol 0611 p. 109).
The well is in a remote location now in Muckinish. It was not always thus. Once the well was located along the old bog road between Ennistymon and Inagh.
A reptile is a cold-blooded vertebrate animal that includes snakes, lizards, crocodiles, turtles and tortoises. We have one native reptile in Ireland and it is the viviparous lizard (Lacerta vivipara). Earc luachra is the Irish for the creature. A viviparous animal is one which brings forth its young live (as opposed to in egg form).
The viviparous lizard is the most northerly reptile in the world and can even be found within the Arctic Circle. It averages 10 to 16 cm in length. It suns itself in order to reach a body temperature of 30 degrees C. It is then able to hunt effectively. Diet is small insects.
The lizard's predators include kestrels, stoats and minks. If the predator grasps the lizard by the tail, the lizard divests itself of the tail piece leaving the aggressor with a stump. The lizard then grows back its tail.
In the pre-antibiotic era in Ireland, folk medicine was widely practised across the country. The medicine was a mix of the natural (cures from herbs, plants, minerals and animal substances of nature) and the magico-religious. The latter consisted of magic, religious/holy wells and healers (Barron Soverino 2018, 1)
One of the folk beliefs was that if a person licked a lizard, he/she could cure a person of a burn by licking it. There are a number of references to this cure in the Schools Collection for schools in North Clare (SC Vol 0614, 321, Killinaboy ; Vol 0615, 307, Rathbaun ; Vol 0616, 049, Aill Bhéil an Tulaigh/
Ballyvaughan (Drumcreehy)). The Schools Collection is a collection of folklore compiled by schoolchildren in Ireland in the 1930s.
The accompanying photo was taken in Ballyryan in the south-west of the Burren.
According to propaganda, Saint Patrick is credited with banishing snakes from Ireland. Tellingly, Patrick himself never made such a claim in his epistles. Snakes never reached Ireland. The snakes in the Patrick legend are a symbol of paganism.
Finally, there is actually one other reptile in Ireland. However, it is not native. It is the slow worm (Anguis fragilis). It is a legless lizard. Its range is confined to County Clare. The worm was introduced from another jurisdiction by misguided folk a couple of decades ago. As they say in Yorkshire - there's nowt as queer as folk.
Bí slán, sabháilte - Be safe and sound.
REFERENCES
Barron, C. and T. Soverino 2018. Put a frog in your mouth ; toothache 'cures' from Nineteenth- and Twentieth -century Ireland.
Journal of the History of Dentistry Vol 66, No.1.
National Folklore Collection 1937/38. The Schools Collection.
LOCATION
The well is located in a small cliff face in the townland of Rossalia on the north eastern slope of Abbey
hill. It is 4 kilometres south east of New Quay and 11 kilometres west of Kinvara, Co
Galway. An impermeable chert-rich
zone on the limestone slope has caused a small outflow of water. The initial part of the outflow was walled in with a well
house and is known as Tobar Phádraig (St Patrick’s Well).
An old, unsurfaced road (known as a “green road”) lies just below the well. Less than one kilometre to the east of the well, the green road links up with an ancient North Clare route way i.e. Carcair na gCléireach (literally the Clerics’ Slope), commonly known as the Corker Pass. This route from north Clare into south Galway dates back to the 16th century at least (Gosling 1991, 126). Thus, St Patrick’s has enjoyed a strategic location for centuries at least.
Furthermore, holy wells are often site-specific for symbolic reasons.
Some are located on the sea shore (O’Sullivan/Dowling 2006, 37). Though St
Patrick’s is not on the seashore, its expansive sea views means that the well
enjoys a liminal land/water, world/otherworld location.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Gosling, P. (2001). The Burren in Medieval Times. The Book of the Burren
. 2nd
edition. Kinvara ; Tír Eolas.
O’Sullivan M. Downey L. (2006). Know Your
Monuments Holy Wells. Archaeology
Ireland.
Spring Edition.
Dublin –
Wordwell Books.
22nd of November in the year '19. In the bleak winter. A rare day for life in Ireland.
The late afternoon view south from Termon in Carran as "the wind and light are working off each other".
The latter is a line from the poem "Postscript" by Séamus Heaney. The poem was first published in The Irish Times. Heaney described it as "a sidelong glimpse of something flying past". He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1995. Heaney passed away on August 30th 2013. He was 74 years of age.
"I Need You at the Dimming of the Day" is a powerful love song written by the great English folk artist Richard Thompson. The song is from the album "I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight" released by Richard and Linda Thompson in 1974. The album was critically ignored and commercially unsuccessful. It is now considered to be a masterpiece. Thompson played the Royal Albert Hall in London on the 30th of September this year to celebrate his 70th birthday.
Connemara is an extensive region of about 1100 square kilometres located west of Galway City.
Its southern confines are defined by Galway Bay. Its western limits are demarcated by the Atlantic whilst to the north the region peters out at Killary fjord.
The great writer and cartographer, Tim Robinson, has described the south Connemara coastline as “banal and overcrowded”. The same can not be said of the sparsely populated interior with its peat lands, lakes and two great mountain ranges, the Twelve Bens to the west and the Maam Turks to the east. Beautiful desolation.