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Killeenadeema

Coordinates: 53°6′35″N 8°35′30″W / 53.10972°N 8.59167°W / 53.10972; -8.59167
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Killeenadeema
Cillín a Díoma
Church at Derrybrien
Church at Derrybrien
Killeenadeema is located in Ireland
Killeenadeema
Killeenadeema
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 53°6′35″N 8°35′30″W / 53.10972°N 8.59167°W / 53.10972; -8.59167
CountryIreland
ProvinceConnacht
CountyGalway
BaronryLoughrea
Area
 • Total
98.9 km2 (38.2 sq mi)

Killeenadeema (Irish: Cillín a Díoma) is a civil parish in County Galway, Ireland. It contains most of the Derrybrien mountains, which hold the Derrybrien Wind Farm.

Name

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The name in Irish is Chillín a Díoma, where cillín means "little church".[1] Thus, it means "Chapel of Díoma".[a]

Location

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Derrybrien Wind Farm

Killeenadeema is in the barony of Loughrea in County Galway, Ireland. The civil parish has an area of 98.9 square kilometres (38.2 sq mi).[2] The town of Loughrea lies on the north shore of Lough Rea, a lake. Killeenadeema includes the southern part of Lough Rea and extends south to the border with County Clare. It contains the Derrybrien Wind Farm. The R353 road crosses the southern part of the parish, running through Derrybrien.[3]

Adjoining parishes are Ardrahan, Ballynakill (Leitrim barony), Feakle (Clare), Kilchreest, Kilconickny, Killinan, Kilteskill, Kilthomas and Loughrea.[4]

Church

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The corresponding Catholic parish is in the Diocese of Clonfert.[5] The Killeenadeema Graveyard about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) south of the lake contains the ruins of the ancient church of Saint Dimas as well as the more recent Catholic church.[6] Saint Dympna's Church was built around 1830 with a single-bay nave and transepts. In 1920 a shallow canted single-bay apse was added. It is built of limestone, with pitched slate roofs. The interior has a timber battened ceiling, a carved timber gallery, marble altar furniture and signed stained glass windows by Harry Clarke. The church is set in a graveyard with many 18th- and 19th-century gravestones, surrounded by a rubble limestone boundary wall.[7]

Parish in 1837

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According to Samuel Lewis in his Topographical Dictionary of Ireland (1837),

KILLEENADEEMA, or KILNADEEMA, a parish, in the barony of LOUGHREA, county of GALWAY, and province of CONNAUGHT, 3 miles (S. by W.) from Loughrea ; containing 3554 inhabitants, This parish comprises a considerable portion of the Derrybrian mountains, and contains 1854 statute acres applotted under the tithe act. It is a vicarage, in the diocese of Clonfert, with the greater portion of the rectory united, together forming part of the union of Loughrea ; the remainder of the rectory is appropriate to the deanery of Clonfert ; the tithes amount to £153. 17. 7-., of which £ 12. 18. 5-., is payable to the dean, and £140. 19. 1-. to the vicar. In the R. C. divisions it is the head of a union or district, comprising also the parish of Kilteskill, and containing chapels at Kildeema, Derrybrian, and Ayle, About 2l0 children are educated in three public schools, to each of which the Earl of Clancarty contributes £5 annually, and about 120 are taught in two private schools.[8]

DERRYBRIEN, an extra-parochial place, in the barony of LOUGHREA, county of GALWAY, and province of CONNAUGHT, about 9 miles (S.) of Loughrea ; containing 907 inhabitants. It consists of a range of mountains of the same name, extending from Gort to Woodford, and partly separating the southern part of the county from Clare : there is a good road over them from Woodford to Gort. Here is a R. C. chapel, dependent on that of Killeenadeema.[8]

Notable people

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Notable people associated with Killeenadeema include:

  • Tony Cummins (1906– 2010), priest and centenarian born in the parish
  • Seán Cunningham (1918–1997), Irish cooperative activist and Republican born in the parish
  • John Fahy (1893–1969), Irish priest, republican, agrarian and radical
  • Kevin Hardiman, special Olympian native of Aille, Killeenadeema, Loughrea
  • John Bernard Hynes (1897–1970), mayor of Boston, from a family from the parish
  • Edmond MacHugo, 16th-.century Irish Chief who resided at Killeenadeema castle, now destroyed
  • Peter Kelly (1847–1908), president of the Gaelic Athletic Association in the late 1880s
  • P. J. Kelly (1843–1908), Fenian

Notes

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  1. ^ Díoma: possibly a variant of Dymphna, the patron saint of the modern chapel in Killeenadeema West.

Citations

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Sources

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  • "Cillín a Díoma", logainm.ie, retrieved 1 November 2021
  • "Civil Parish of Killeenadeema, Co. Galway", townlands.ie, retrieved 1 November 2021
  • Grenham, John (2021), Killeenadeema civil parish, Galway, retrieved 1 November 2021
  • "Killeenadeema Diocese of Clonfert", Catholic Parish Registers at the NLI, National Library of Ireland, retrieved 1 November 2021
  • "Killeenadeema Graveyard", Find a Grave, retrieved 1 November 2021
  • Lewis, Samuel (1837), Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, retrieved 1 November 2021
  • "Relation: Killeenadeema (5806409)", OpenStreetMap, retrieved 1 November 2021
  • "Saint Dympna's Church, KILLEENADEEMA WEST, GALWAY", National Inventory of Architectural Heritage, Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, retrieved 1 November 2021