The àFearghail are an Irish family of County Longford. The patronym means "descendant of Fearghail", whose name means "man of valour". Fearghail was a great-grandson of Angaile, who was a 10th-century King of Fortúatha. Angaile conquered Annaly, and he is the namesake of Annaly. His àFearghail descendants were the Princes of Annaly for 6 centuries. The àFearghail produced 7 Bishops of Ardagh. The name became Farrell, and Kevin Farrell became Cardinal Bishop of Dallas, Texas.
Early history
According to the historian C. Thomas Cairney, the ÃÂ Fearghail were part of the Conmaicne Rein tribe in Ireland who came from the Erainn tribe who were the second wave of Celts to settle in Ireland from about 500 and 100 BC.
The ÃÂ Fearghail chieftain historically sat at the ÃÂ Fearghail stronghold of Longford (), with another ÃÂ Fearghail seat at Moatfarrell () in the eastern part of Annaly, between Ballinalee and Edgeworthstown. From the early 11th century until the colonial confiscations of James I in the early 17th century, the ÃÂ Fearghail ruled Annaly as a principality. This rule was disrupted by repeated English invasions in the 12th and 13th centuries. By the 15th century, the ÃÂ Fearghail regained complete control and had divided into the North Annaly ruling White ÃÂ Fearghail () and the South Annaly ruling Yellow ÃÂ Fearghail (). The ÃÂ Fearghail principality was greatly undermined in 1552, when King Edward VI granted much of the lands of Annaly to Baron Delvin, including the Holy Island and lands of the ÃÂ Fearghail. By 1618, the ÃÂ Fearghail of Longford were finally deposed as Princes of Annaly by King James I, losing all of their lands and privileges. After the fall of the tribal Gaelic Order, many became tenants of their old land with English and Scottish landlords.
Bishops of Ardagh
In the Ireland of the 14th and 15th century, ecclesiastical offices were often entrusted as hereditary offices. Members of the àFearghail family produced 7 Bishops of Ardagh for the periods 1343âÂÂ67, and 1373âÂÂ8, and for most of the 15th century.
- Eóghan àFearghail (Owen OâÂÂFerral), 1343âÂÂ1367
- Cairbre àFearghail (Charles OâÂÂFerrall), 1373âÂÂ1378
- Conchobhar àFearghail (Conor OâÂÂFerral), 1416âÂÂ1423
- Risdeárd àFearghail (Richard OâÂÂFerral), 1425âÂÂ1444
- Donnchadh àFearghail (Donatus OâÂÂFerral), 1467âÂÂ1469
- Seaán àFearghail (John OâÂÂFerral), 1469âÂÂ1479
- Uilliam àFearghail, (William OâÂÂFerral) 1482âÂÂ1516
Early modern era
Anglicised forms of the ÃÂ Fearghail surname include O'Farrell, Farrell, O'Farrill, Farley, O'Ferrall, Ferrell, Ferrill, and Ferril. The first record of an O'Farrell in the English language was written in 1620 by Father Richard O'Farrell of County Longford. A number of O'Farrell men served in an Irish regiment of the Spanish Army in the Eighty Years' War. By the time of the Irish Rebellion of 1641, many troops returned to fight with the Irish Catholic movement of confederate Ireland. By the end of the 17th century, the O'Farrells had mostly returned to Ireland, where they are abundant to this day in the midland counties, especially in County Longford.
Timeline
- 1014: Fearghail's great-grandfather Angaile has by this stage established control over Annaly.
- 1014: Fearghail of Conmaicne was killed during the Battle of Clontarf. It is from this man that the ÃÂ Fearghail clan claims their descent.
- 1262: The English of Meath deposed Giolla na Naomh ÃÂ Fearghail, who committed "many evils, depredations, aggressions, spoliations, and slaughters" to re-assert his lordship of Annaly..
- 1316: The ÃÂ Fearghail fought at the Second Battle of Athenry in support of Edward the Bruce's Irish Campaign, with four of the ÃÂ Fearghail dying by the victorious English.
- 1323: A large English army under Lord Bermingham attempted to attack the ÃÂ Fearghail but were repulsed and slain at the command of Donnell ÃÂ Fearghail.
- 1329: The sons of John ÃÂ Fearghail and a group of Meath English lured and murdered the Earl of Breifne at a house in Fore.
- 1347âÂÂ1516: Eight members of the àFearghail served as Bishop of Ardagh.
- 1452: The àFearghail Chief clashed briefly with the Earl of Ormond, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, over the imprisonment of Lord Bermingham's son by the OâÂÂReillys of East Breifne. àFearghail buys Ormond off, and the Lord Lieutenant leaves to pursue OâÂÂReilly.
- 1464: John ÃÂ Fearghail and Redmond ÃÂ Fearghail of the Annaly Lords died of bubonic plague along with members of their families.
- 1471: A battle between the OâÂÂReillys and the àFearghail took place at Clankee in which the OâÂÂReilly commander was killed and the àFearghail Chief was taken prisoner.
- 1475: A number of the ÃÂ Fearghail were banished to the English of Meath for killing a member of the clan.
- 1504: Chief àFearghail (along with most other Irish chiefs) joined forces with the Lord Deputy, Gearóid FitzGerald, and they formed a very large army. This English/Gaelic army marched on Munster and were victorious over the OâÂÂBriens at the Battle of Knockdoe, one of the largest battles ever witnessed in Ireland.
- 1565: The Annaly ÃÂ Fearghail repeatedly clashed with the new Lord Deputy to Ireland, Sir Henry Sidney, who planned to shire the county.
- 1618: The àFearghail of Longford are finally deposed as Lords of Annaly by King James I, losing their lands and privileges forever. âÂÂThey were deprived of their estates without any compensation whatsoever, or any means of subsistence assigned themâ (Annals of the Four Masters).
- 1620: The first written record of an O'Farrell in the English language was by Father Richard OâÂÂFarrell, who was a priest in Annaly, Longford. He was a member of the Irish Catholic Confederacy, and later witnessed and wrote about conflicts on the European Continent.
- 1646: At the Battle of Benburb, General Richard O'Farrell, arrived in Ireland from his serving as an officer in the Spanish Army on the continent, led the Longford Column which was an O'Farrell force in the Irish Confederate Army under the leadership of Owen Roe OâÂÂNeill, and decisively defeated the Covenanters in a large scale major pitched battle. O'Farrell was deputy to Owen Roe O'Neill in the Irish Confederate Army.
- 1649: At the First Siege of Waterford, Oliver Cromwell battled with General Richard O'Farrell who arrived in order to defend the city. O'Farrell was victorious due to tactical superiority to Cromwell, namely via siege warfare experience gained battling in the Low Countries in Spanish and French armies.
- 1649: In Wexford, Captain Daniel O'Farrell recaptured Enniscorthy Castle from the New Model Army.
- 1650: Francis Fergus OâÂÂFarrell was born in County Longford. He moved to the Netherlands, married a local girl, and had six children. Eventually, he served in the army of William of Orange and saw action in England and Ireland, fighting for the Protestants.
- 1652: After Waterford, General Richard O'Farrell appeared again in Irish history, this time defending Galway with Thomas Preston, 1st Viscount Tara against the New Model Army. Here the English Parliamentarians were victorious.
- 1657: The remnants of the OâÂÂFarrell clan, known as the Wild Geese, were in the service of the French Army, and commanded an access route to Brussels during the Franco-Spanish War. However, at the behest of exiled Charles II of England, they switched sides and allowed the Spanish to pass on the road and attack Brussels from Flanders.
- 1662: The OâÂÂFarrell clan, on the orders of the recently reinstated King Charles II, was commissioned to Tangier in North Africa. 381 OâÂÂFarrells make up the bulk of the Irish contingent, which was half of the Tangier Regiment, and sailed for Africa.
- 1691: Ceadagh OâÂÂFarrell of Annaly, Longford was killed at the Battle of the Boyne. Ceadagh's three sons fled to fight in French Brigades, with some settling in Picardy, France.
- 1709: Roger O'Ferrall authored a work entitled "Linea Antiqua, or, A Genealogical, Chronological, and Historical Account of the Gathelian, Melesian, Scottish or Irish People, or Nation, from the beginning of time to this Year of Our Lord 1709", which collected together many genealogical pedigrees of the Gaels. It was later transcribed by Sir William Betham and copied by John O'Hart in his Irish Pedigrees. This document is held by the Genealogical Office at the National Library of Ireland.
- 1751: The House of More O'Ferrall is founded by the marriage of Richard O'Ferrall and Laetitia O'More. Richard held the title "Prince of Annaly" and thus the bearers of this title are now the More O'Ferralls.
See also
References