The Prendergasts (de Priondargas) take
their name from a parish in Pembrokeshire. Maurice de Prendergast was one of the Flemish
knights who accompanied Strongbow to Ireland in the original Anglo-Norman invasion of the
twelfth century. He and his descendants obtained large grants of land in different parts
of the south and west of Ireland. The principal branches of this powerful family held wide
lands in what are now the counties of Wexford, Kilkenny, Tipperary, Limerick, Mayo and
Galway. Some of the Mayo branch adopted the Gaelic patronymic MacMorris (Mac Muiris) or
Fitzmaurice, while a branch of those in County Kerry adopted the form MacShearhoon (Mac
Searthuin).
The Roches (de Roiste), a Flemish family from
Wales, came to Ireland with the Anglo-Norman invasion, and settled in Wexford in the late
twelfth century. The Roches became numerous as landholders in the area, and branches of
the family settled in counties Cork and Limerick. Roche of Rochesland was one of the
principal gentlemen of Wexford in 1598. In Cork they acquired by marriage the district
around Fermoy, which came to be known as Crioch Roisteach, or Roches Country. The
head of this branch was known as Baron Fermoy. The Roches of Limerick were an important
merchant family in that city, and several were prominent in its defense against the
English in 1651. There are a number of places called Rochestown in Ireland, six in Wexford
alone, and two more in Kilkenny.
The Sutherlands (Sutherlarach) and Murrays
(Moireach Latin: de Moravia) descend from Freskin, son of Ollec, a Flemish knight
with lands in what is now Pembroke in Wales. He was granted by David I, King of Scots, the
lands of Strabrock in West Lothian and also Duffas in conquered Moray. Freskin or his son
William intermarried with the Picto-Scottish Royal House of Moray, in whose defeat he was
taking part, following the Norman custom of consolidation by intermarriage. At about this
time the southern part of Caithness was being wrested from the Norse who had long
controlled that northern extremity, and the resultant territory (known as
"Sudrland" or "the South-Land" by those northwardly-oriented Northmen)
was given before the year 1211 to Hugh of Moray, son of William, by William the Lion, King
of Scots. William, younger brother of Hugh of Moray, Lord of Sutherland, was ancestor of
the great family of Murray, while Hughs own son William of Sutherland was made Earl
of Sutherland about the year 1235. His line became chiefs of the Pictish tribe that
originally inhabited Caithness before the coming of the Vikings, and to them the earls
were always known as the lords of the Catti (cat is the root meaning), the tribal
designation from which Caithness ("peninsula of the Catti") takes its name.
Hence the "wild-cat" crest of the Sutherland chiefs, similar to that of the
nearby Clan Chattan (see Chapter VII), the Picto-Scottish Erainnian clan with whom they
probably shared a Pictish connection. The earls fought for the Royal House of Bruce, and
but for the death of the fifth earls son by Margaret Bruce, heiress of the House of
Bruce, it would have |