The Clann Fearghaill
The Clann Fearghaill or OHallorans (O
hAllmhurain) were chiefs of Clann Fearghaile, an extensive district named after them which
lay just west of Galway City. They maintained their leading position in Iar-Connacht (the
largely barren territory west of the province of Connacht proper) up to the end of the
sixteenth century. Being originally Norse in extraction, they probably were connected with
the origin of Galway City itself, before the Normans came to Galway and monopolized its
merchant enterprises after the twelfth century.
The Clann Guinne
The Clann Guinne or Gunns (Guinne) descend from
Gunni, grandson of Sweyn Asleifs son, famed in the sagas as a wily and daring Viking
in the twelfth century. Gunnis wife, Ragnhild, was the daughter of the Norse Earl of
Caithness and Orkney. She carried to the Gunns large estates in Caithness and Sutherland.
The territory of the Gunns was in the Highland part of Caithness, where they formed a
buffer state between the earls of Caithness in the northeast, the MacKays to the west and
the MacKays rivals, the earls of Sutherland, to the south. The chiefs of the Gunns
held the hereditary office of Crowner of Caithness in the fifteenth century, an important
position in the north, and from early in that century they carried on a vicious blood-feud
with the Keiths of Ackergill, a northern branch of that family. The MacKeamishes, or Jamesons descend from James, the chief of the clan, who was the son
of George, Crowner of Caithness in 1464. The Gunn chiefs patronymic title in Gaelic,
Mac Sheumais Chataich (The MacJames, or Jameson, of Caithness), is derived from the same
famous James.
The MacCotters
The MacCotters (Mac Oiter) were seated at
Carrigtwohil, near the city of Cork, The townland of Ballymacotter indicates their early
presence in the area. It is interesting to note that the MacCotters, like the other Norse
families in Ireland, the OHallorans and the ODoyles, were settled in areas
adjacent to coastal settlements which were originally Norse.
The ODoyles
The ODoyles (O Dubhghaill) originated in the
coastal regions of southeast Leinster (Counties Wicklow and Wexford). "O
Dubhghaill" means "dark foreigner," an epithet applied to the Norse
settlers of the area by the native Gaelic inhabitants, and hence there may be more than
one Norse ancestor for families so named. In any case, the main sept of the name was
located in the area of the Wexford-Wicklow border, from which area branches spread
throughout the southeastern region, and beyond. In keeping with their Norse origin,
families of the name have always been more numerous in the maritime |