Mullinashee in what is now the Barony
of Raphoe, County Donegal. Several of the family, sons of the Chief, were important
ecclesiastics at the end of the sixteenth and first half of the seventeenth centuries, Of
these, Glaisne OCullinan (15581584), Cistercian Abbot of Boyle, was martyred
(that is, murdered by the English) and Dr. John Cullinan (15851653) was Bishop of
Raphoe and suffered much persecution, ending his career as a prominent supporter of
Rinnuccini at the Confederation of Kilkenny.
The Cineal Enda or ODohertys (O Dochartaigh) were originally
settled in Ardmire (Ard Miodhair) in the barony of Raphoe, but about the beginning of the
fifteenth century they became lords of Inishowen in the northeastern corner of County
Donegal. Afterwards they were one of the most influential families in Tirconnell
(Tir-Conaill), retaining their position as lords of Inishowen down to the reign of James
the First in the early seventeenth century, at which time their lands were confiscated as
a result of the rebellion of Sir Cahir ODogherty. The OGallaghers (O
Gallchobhair) descend from Maolchobha, High-King of Tara in 615. They were powerful in
Tir-Conaill, and as marshalls of ODonnells forces, they took a prominent part
in all the military actions of the Cineal Conaill during the fourteenth and subsequent
centuries. Many of them were distinguished bishops of Raphoe and Derry.
The Cineal Conaill in Scotland were known as the Kindred of St.
Columba, the great saint who founded lona. This epithet was applied to all the descendants
of St. Columbas great-grandfather, Conall Gulban, but was especially applied to
branches within the clan devoted to ecclesiastical pursuits, especially in Scotland. Thus
the Kindred was comprised of several early saints, and also of the hereditary abbots of
Iona, Kells, Derry and Dunkeld, some of whom were descended from the Saint Columbas
brother. The Kindred of St. Columba remained closely connected to the Abbey at lona
despite changes in political control and the distance from the Cineal Conall homeland in
Donegal. In 1164 King Somerled of the Isles (see under MacDonald) invited the chief co-arb
(see Chapter IV) of St. Columba to accept the Abbacy of lona; but the Cineal Connaill
would not allow the Columban primacy (which first went from lona to Kells, and then to
Derry in Donegal, the homeland of the Kindred) to pass from Derry back to the Hebrides.
The Abbacy was then offered to members of the OBrollaghan branch
of the Cineal Eoghan, a Derry-based ecclesiastical family with splendid masonic skills,
but their talented representative at Iona died in 1203. This left a void at Iona, an
absence of the Columban Kindred, and so Ranald, next King of the Isles had no choice but
to follow the Scottish example at Scone and install a foreign order, in this case the
Benedictine Order, at lona. This inevitably led to high-strung local dissension by those
who preferred the native way of the (Celtic) Columban church, which had had hereditary,
non-celibate abbots of the Kindred administering the abbey estates. Finally, in 1204, the
Cineal Conaill, led by two bishops and two abbots all of the Kindred of St. Columba,