Ballynary

Ballynary (Irish: Baile an Fharaidh, meaning 'townland of the fodder')[1] is the name of a townland on the eastern shore of Lough Arrow in the southern corner of County Sligo in Ireland. Ballynary was the ancestral seat of the O'Higgins family (or Ó hUiginn in Irish) for 700 years,[2] until they were forced off their lands in 1654 by Oliver Cromwell.[3]

Jetty at Loughbrick Bay on Lough Arrow, between Ballynary and Annaghgowan townlands

The townland of Ballynary is just over 210 acres (85 ha) in area, and is just 2km from Ballindoon where the ruins of a Dominican Abbey, founded by the MacDonagh Clan, are located. Ballynary also contains the O'Higgins Memorial Park which is dedicated to Ambrose O'Higgins, who was born in Ballynary in 1720/21 and who—emigrating to Spain to escape the discrimination against Irish Catholics in his time—eventually became the Viceroy of Peru, then part of the Spanish Empire. His son Bernardo O'Higgins became the first Supreme Director of Chile.[4]

The Chilean city of Vallenar was founded by Ambrose O'Higgins and named for his birthplace, the variant spelling having developed though usage by Spanish-speaking inhabitants. The name of Vallenar Bay in Alaska is derived from the Chilean name and thus indirectly from the Irish one.[5]

References

  1. "Baile an Fharaidh / Ballynary". logainm.ie. Irish Placenames Commission. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  2. MacKenna, Carlos Juan. 1916. El Origen de don Ambrosio O’Higgins y sus primeros anos en América. Revista Chilen de Historia y Geographia, No. 21. pp. 126-150.
  3. O’Rorke, T. (1889) "The History of Sligo Town and County Vol. II – Conclusion" (Dublin: Duffy & Company).
  4. "O'Higgins, Bernardo". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Retrieved 13 October 2008.
  5. Place Names in Revillagigedo and Gravina Islands: Spanish and Irish heritage of Southeast Alaska

54.082°N 8.323°W / 54.082; -8.323


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