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From Ireland Home page>>Co Armagh page>>Lewis Topographical Dictionary, Co. Armagh>> Armagh City & civil parish Part 1 : Part 2 : Part 3 : Part 4 : Part 5 Armagh City & civil parish, Co. Armagh ARMAGH, a city, market and post-town and a parish, partly in the barony of O'NEILLAND WEST, but chiefly in that of ARMAGH, and county of ARMAGH (of which it is the capital),and province of ULSTER, 31 miles (S. W. by W) from Belfast city, and 65¾ (N.N.W.)from Dublin city; containing 10,518 inhabitants, of which number, 9470 are within in the limits of the borough. The past importance of this ancient city is noticed by several early historians, who describe it as the "chief city in Ireland". St. Fiech, who flourished in the sixth century, calls it the "seat of empire"; Giraldus Cambrensis, "the metropolis"; and, even so lately as 1580, Cluverius styles it the "head of the kingdom," adding that Dublin was then next in rank to it. The original name was Druim-sailech, "the hill of sallows," which was afterwards changed to 'Ard-sailech', "the height of sallows," and, still later, to 'Ard-macha', either from Eamhuin-macha, the regal residence of the Kings of Ulster, which stood in its vicinity, or, as is more probable, from its characteristic situation, Ard-macha, signifying "the high place or field." Armagh
is the head of the primacy of all Ireland, and is indebted for its
origin, and ecclesiastical pre-eminence, to St. Patrick, by whom
it was built, in 445. He also founded, near his own mansion, the
monastery of St. Peter and St. Paul, for Canons Regular of the order
of St. Augustine, which was rebuilt by Imar O'Hoedegan, and was
the most distinguished of the religious establishments which existed
here, having materially contributed to the early importance of the
place. This institution received numerous grants of endowment from
the native kings, the last of whom, Roderick O'Connor, made
a grant to its professors, in 1169; in so much that its landed possessions
became very extensive, as appears from an inquisition taken on its
suppression. Attached to it was a school or college, which long
continued one of the most celebrated seminaries in Europe, and from
which many learned men, not only of The Archdiocese or See of Armagh The city was destroyed by accidental conflagrations in the years 670, 687, and 770, and also sustained considerable injury in the last-mentioned year by lightning. In subsequent periods it suffered severely and repeatedly from the Danes, a band of whom having landed at Newry, in 830, penetrated into the interior, and having stormed Armagh established their head-quarters in it for one month, and on being driven out, plundered and reduced it to ashes. In 836, Tergesius, or Thorgis, a Danish chieftain, equally celebrated for his courage and ferocity, after having laid waste Connaught and a great part of Meath and Leinster, turned his arms against Ulster, which he devastated as far as Lough Neagh, and then advancing against Armagh, took it with little difficulty. His first act, after securing possession of the place, was the expulsion of the Bishop Farannan, with all the students of the college, and the whole body of the religious, of whom the bishop and clergy sought refuge in Cashel, The numerous atrocities perpetrated by the invaders at length excited a combined effort against them. Nial the Third collected a large army, and after having defeated the Danes in a pitched battle in Tyrconnel, advanced upon Armagh, where, after a second successful engagement, and while preparing to force his victorious way into the city, the main position of the enemy in these parts, he was drowned in the river Callan, in an attempt to save the life of one of his followers. Malachy, his successor, obtained possession of the city, in which a public assembly of the princes and chieftains of Ireland was held, in 849, to devise the means of driving their ferocious enemies out of the island. In their first efforts the Danes suffered several defeats; but, having concentrated their forces, and being supported by a reinforcement of their countrymen, they again marched against Armagh, and took and plundered it about the year 852. The subsequent annals of Armagh, to the commencement of the 11th century, are little more than a reiteration of invasions and conquests by the Danes, and of successful but brief insurrections of the natives, in all of which this devoted city became in turn the prize of each contending army, and suffered all the horrors of savage warfare. In 1004, the celebrated Brian Boru entered Armagh, where he presented at the the great altar of the church a collar of gold weighing 20 ounces; and after his death at the battle of Clontarf, the in 1014, his remains were deposited here, according to his dying request, with those of his son Murchard, who fell in the same battle. From this period to the English invasion the history of Armagh exhibits a series of calamitous incidents either by hostile inroads or accidental fires. Its annals, however, evince no further relation to the events of that momentous period than the fact of a synod of the Irish clergy having been held in it by Gelasius, in 1170, in which that assembly came to the conclusion that the foreign invasion and internal distractions of the country were a visitation of divine retribution, as a punishment for the inhuman practice of purchasing Englishmen from pirates and selling them as slaves; and it was therefore decreed that every English captive should be liberated. The city suffered severely from the calamities consequent on the invasion of Edward Bruce, in 1315, during which the entire see was lamentably wasted, and the archbishop was reduced to a state of extreme destitution, by the reiterated incursions of the Scottish army. During the local wars in Ulster, at the close of the 15th and the beginning of the 16th centuries, this city was reduced to a state of great wretchedness ; and in the insurrection of Shane O'Nial or O'Neal, Lord Sussex, then lord lieutenant, marched into Ulster to oppose him; and having attacked him successfully at Dundalk, forced him to retire upon Armagh, which the lord-lieutenant entered in Oct, 1557, and wasted with fire and sword, sparing only the cathedral. In 1566, O'Nial, to revenge himself on Archbishop Loftus, who had transmitted information of his hostile intentions to Government, even before the Irish chieftains and the lord-deputy had preferred their complaint against him, resolved on a special expedition against this city, and on this occasion committed dreadful havoc, not even sparing the cathedral. In the year 1575, Sydney, the lord-deputy, marched into Ulster against Turlogh O'Nial, and fixed his head-quarters at Armagh, whither that chieftain, after some ineffectual negociations through the agency of his wife, proceeded, and having surrendered himself, was permitted to return home without molestation. In
the short but sanguinary war carried on between the English Government
and Hugh O'Nial,
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From Ireland Home page>>Co Armagh page>>Lewis Topographical Dictionary, Co. Armagh>> Armagh City & civil parish Part 1 : Part 2 : Part 3 : Part 4 : Part 5
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