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Do you know any towns in ireland that you know where the name came from ?

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I need to know 10 towns/places in ireland and know where they got the name of the town from.

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  1. belfast was named after king william and his horse who was named bell. whom it was said while riding through belfast and was lookin the horse to go faster was heard to shout at the horse bel-fast. so they say any way


  2. Limavady = Leamh na Vaddagh - means Leap of the Dog and comes from an old legend about a local chieftain and his hunting dog crossing the river.

    Dungiven - Means Castle of Given

    Dublin - means black pool

    Derry  = Doire means line of the Oaks

    Ballycastle = Town of the castle

  3. Most of the names of towns in Ireland are actually anglicised forms of descriptions of the place or the predominant family in the area in the Irish language.

    Anglicised:  Clonmel. Original Irish: Cluain Meala. Translates as Valley of honey.

    Likewise:

    Cork - Corcaigh - Marshy place

    Kilkenny - Cill Cheannaigh - Church of Saint Canice

    Ballyneale - Baile Ui Neill - townland of the O'Neill Family

    Oola - Ulla - Apples (lots of orchards in the area long ago)

    Labbasheeda - Leaba na si - Bed of the fairies (which probably sounds hysterical to modern ears. However, here, we're talking about fairies in the original sense, as in supernatural creatures).

    Derry - Doire - Oak tree

    Carrick-on-Suir - Carraig na tSiuire - Rock on the River Suir.

    Dungarvan - Dun Garbhan - Sandy fortress

    Tralee - Tra Liath - Grey strand

    Hope this helps.

  4. Cork: Corcaigh in Irish, which means "marsh", because it was built on a marsh.

    Waterford:  comes from the Norse word Vedrarfjord meaning "windy fjord".

    Kildare:  From the Irish Cill Dara, meaning "church of the oak".

    Cashel: from the Irish Caiseal Mumhan, meaning "stone fortress of Munster", because of the large area of exposed limestone upon which many forts and castles have been built over the centuries.

    Youghal: from the Irish Eochaill meaning "yew woods", because there used to be many of these in the area.

  5. abbots cross it came from the vikings

  6. Tralee was stated above ag grey strand, I'd like to disagree because the river lee runs through Tralee (not to be confused with the Lee in Cork) So Tralee come from Strand of the Lee

  7. well I'm from Dublin, and the name derives from the Gaelic Dubh (black) Linn (pool), it got its name from where the dodder river meets the liffey, causing a black pool...

    I was in Belfast in October and did the bus tour, and according to the tour guide Belfast got its name from the Gaelic, 'mouth of the feiste river' , beal meaning mouth in Gaelic, so beal feist..belfast.

    Baile , means town of, so I grew up in Ballyfermot, so that translates as town of fermot.

  8. Dublin- from Dubh linn meaning black pool because there is an underground lake under the city.

    Kilkenny- Cill Chainnigh which means the cell of Cainnis who was a saint who settled there.

    Tyrone- TírEoghain means Eoghan's county

    most place names were named for forts (such as places with dún or áth in their name) in the area

  9. Ballinasloe= Béal Athá na Slua= mouth of the crowd, it is on a river and is a crossing point for the river, hence everybody came to cross the river.

  10. athenry in co. galway

    in irish it's áth an rí because ath is the irish for ford (an crossing in a river) and rí is the irish for king & athenry happened to have a ford where 3 kingdoms meet.....

    Kiltullagh (again in Co. Galway) is Cill Tulach, which is the Church on the Hill which is still present there today....

  11. These are examples of towns from every province in Ireland

    English Name - Irish Source - English Translation

    Roscommon - Ros Comain - Wood of Coman (Coman was a saint from the area)

    Dublin - Dubh Linn - Black Pool

    Elphin - Ail Finn - Rock of the Clear Spring

    Athlone - Átha Luain - Ford(Watercrossing) of Luan

    Navan - An Uaimh - The Cave

    Galway - Gaillimh - Stony, referring to the stony river the city sits on.

    Cashel - Caiseal - Stone Fortress

    Belfast - Béal Feirste - Sandy Ford at the River's Mouth

    Derry - Doire - Oak

    Tramore - Trá Mór - Large Beach

  12. Cahirciveen, Co. Kerry. "Cahir" means stone fort and "civeen" is an Anglicisation of "Sibheen" which means "little Sarah", so the whole means Little Sarah's stone fort.

    Ballyduff, Co. Kerry. "Bally" is an Anglicisation of the Gaelic, "Baile" ( pronounced barlya) which means town and duff is an anglicisation of "dubh" (dove) which means black, so the whole means Blacktown.

    Dublin is the Anglicisation of Dubh and Linn and mean Black Pool. That's all that I can think of without straining my brain.

  13. Kilkenny - Cill Chainnigh (Gaelic)= Church of St.Canice

    Waterford - Vadra Fjord (old Norse) = windy fjord

    Cork - Corcaigh (Gaelic) = swamp

    Midleton (Co.Cork) - Mainistir na Corann (Gaelic) = Monastery of the choir

    Tramore (Co.Waterford) - Tra Mor (Gaelic) = big strand

    Carlow - Ceatharlach (Gaelic) = Four lakes

    Clonmel (Co.Tipperary) - Cluan Meala (Gaelic) = honey field

    Cashel (Co. Tipperary) - An Caisleann (Gaelic) = the castle

    Killarney (Co. Kerry) - Cill Airne(Gaelic) = the church of the sloe

  14. Adamstown in Dublin was named after Sean Adams, a shady developer who gave out a few brown envelopes to poor anorak wearing men who had to buy their own tea.

    There is a town in Donegal called Muff, but I don't know if you are old enough to hear the origins of that!  I always hoped that it could be twinned with d***o, Newfoundland.

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