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O'Brien/O'Bryant/Brien/Bryant (
ó Briain)
The clan of Brian
Boru.
From the tenth century, when the sept rose to the High Kingship of Ireland in the person of Brian Boru, down to the present day, the O'Briens have always been prominent in the history of the country.
Before Brian Boru's time, the Dalcassian clan, known as the Ui Toirdealbhaigh, to which they belonged, was not of outstanding importance in Thomond: the greatness of Brian gave them pre-eminence there and in due course the sept, which took the surname O'Brien from him, divided into several branches and possessed a great part of Munster, of which they were frequently kings.
The O'Briens of Ara (north Tipperary), a territory they acquired from the O'Donegans about the year 1300 had as chief Mac Ui Bhriain Ara; those of Co. Limerick gave their name to the barony of Pubbelebrien; another branch was located around Aherlow by the Galtees; and another south of the Comeragh Mountains on the rich lands near Dungarvan.
In all those areas, and especially in Co. Clare they are numerous to-day: the name, in fact, is so common that it comes sixth in the statistical list relating to Irish surnames, with an estimated population of more than thirty thousand persons.
In this connexion it may be observed, that though fifty years ago one third of the people of the name was registered as plain Brien, nowadays it is rarely to be found without the prefix O.
The outstanding figure is, of course, Brian Boru (941 - 1014), whose remarkable career as High King of Ireland ended with his death on the field of the battle of Clontarf when the Norsemen were finally subdued.
Brian, in fact used no surname; it was, however, in regular use forty years after his death.
According to Eleanor Hull's History of Ireland the first O'Brien to adopt the surname was Donagh Cairbre (1194-1242), son of Donal, who submitted to Henry II., From 1055 to 1616.
The last year recorded by the Four Masters, O'Briens figure in the annals of every generation, over 300 individuals of the name finding a place in that great work.
In the "Annals of Innisfallen", which deal principally with the southern half of Ireland, the O'Briens appear more often than any other sept.
Murrough O'Brien (d. 1551) was the first Earl of Thomond; Murrough of the Burnings (d. 1674) was sixth Baron Inchiquin.
The descendants of Brian Boru, in the main line, have been peers of the realm under three titles, Earls and Marquises of Thomond, Barons and Earls of Inchiquin and Viscounts Clare.
The two former have more often than not been on the side of England, notably Murrough O'Brien, first Earl of Thomond (d. 1551), who was one of the great Gaelic chiefs to acknowledge Henry VIII, and the other notorious Murrough O'Brien, sixth Baron Inchiquin (1614-1674) whose exploits during the war of 1641-1650 earned him the sobriquet "Murrough of the Burnings".
The Viscounts Clare, on the other hand, present a different picture; the first of these, Daniel O'Brien (1577-1663), was a member of the Supreme Council of the Catholic Confederates; it was the third Viscount, also Daniel O'Brien (d.1690), who raised the famous Irish Brigade regiment known as Clare's Dragoons, which was later commanded in many famous battles on the continent by the fifth Viscount,
Charles O'Brien, whose distinguished military career ended when he was killed at the battle of Ramillies in 1706, while his son, Charles O'Brien, sixth Viscount (1699-1771), upheld the family tradition at Dettingen and Fontenoy, and became a Marshal of France.
The above is taken from Go Ireland site:-
http://www.goireland.com/genealogy/scripts/Family.asp?FamilyID=21

Butler
Connections exist from the 1500s between Butlers and
O'Briens.
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Helen Butler, dau of Piers Butler, 8th Earl of Ormonde and Lady Margaret FitzGerald, married Donough O'Brien, 1st Earl of Thomond, son of Conor O'Brien, Prince of Thomond and Annabell de Burgh. Ref:-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piers_Butler%2C_1st_Earl_of_Ormonde |
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James Butler, 2nd Baron Dunboyne was born circa 1547. He was the son of Edmund Butler, 1st Baron Dunboyne and Julia MacCarthy. He married, secondly, Margaret O'Brien, daughter of Conor O'Brien, 2nd Earl of Thomond. Ref:-
http://www.thepeerage.com/p7342.htm |
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Murrough (Morgan) O'Brien of Ballyphillip Co Limerick
married Eleanor Butler, d of Capt Edward Butler of Bansha, desc
of Thomas Butler, 10th Earl of Ormonde. As was often the
case Morgan O'Brien took Butler as his surname probably as part of his succession to the lands of Bansha, Co Tipperary in 1690. Morgan and
Eleanor's son was William O'Brien Butler of Bansha Co Tipperary d 1773. He married his
cousin Catherine Butler who was co-heir to Bansha Co Tipperary and dau of Edmund Butler, 8th Lord of Dunboyne, (d 11.1732) brother of Earl of Ormonde. Ref:-
http://www.stirnet.com/HTML/genie/british/bb4fz/butler05.htm
and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baron_Dunboyne
.
William and Catherine's son was Pierce O'Brien Butler d 1812
His son was Edmund O'Brien Butler d 1877
His son was Murrough (Morgan) O'Brien Butler who came to America and dropped the 'O'Brien' to become Morgan Butler, alive in 1859.
So he may be the link whereby many of the name Butler have Type III
haplotypes. |
A member of the Type III cluster, Bruce Butler, is descended from a William Butler b 1720 Isle of Wight Co VA USA, who presumably was also Type III.
William Butler's birth predates the marriage of William
O'Brien-Butler of Bansagh (Bansha) recorded in the Irish Genealogist as occurring in 1763, so if this marriage date can be relied upon, the crossover ancestor from the
O'Briens, if this indeed was the source of the Butler Type III yDNA, must have been somewhat earlier.
Now the marriage of Morgan O'Brien Butler has been discovered they may be the parents of William Butler of Isle of Wight, VA USA.

Crow(e) (McEnchruadh) (MacEnchroe)
The very English-looking name
Crowe disguises the genuinely
Irish surname MacEnchroe, which
in its original form is Mac
Conchradha. Woulfe states
that the form MacEnchroe is
still in use; but all the
members of this sept who live in
its original territory, viz.
Thomond, are certainly called
simply Crowe. The sept was
subordinate to that of O'Dea and
was located in the western part
of the present barony of
Inchiquin. The great
majority of Crowes either hail
from Clare and Tipperary or are
of families which migrated to
Dublin and other large urban centers
from that area.
The name is fairly numerous in
Belfast but most of these are
presumably of British planted
stock, Crowe being quite a
common name in England.
The old form MacEnchroe was that
usually used in the
transplantation certificates of
the 1650's. In one or two
cases the form MacCrowe was
used. It is preserved in
the motto "Skeagh mac en
chroe" attached to the coat
of arms of the Clare Crowes.
It is interesting to note that
there is a place-name near Mount
Callan in Co. Clare called
Skaghvicencrowe which means the
thorn bush of MacEncroe.
Some branches of the Crowe sept
used a thorn bush as the main
charge in their arms. The
old form was still used in Co.
Tipperary in the last century,
eg. by the family of Rev. John
McEnroe (1795-1868), who, as
well as being the founder of the
Freeman's Journal of Sydney, is
noteworthy for his edition of
Donlevy's Catechism.
Dermot MacEncroe (fl. 1730),
author of many beautiful poems
in Latin, was of a French family
which had emigrated from Co.
Clare and used de la Croix as a
French form of MacEncroe.
The best known Irish Crowe was
O'Beirne Crowe of Cong, Co.
Galway, who though according to
tradition he was stupid and
ill-educated as a boy, became
one of the first professors in
the Queen's College (now
University College) Galway, and
was in the first rank of Gaelic
scholars. Eyre Evans Crowe
(1799-1868), the historian and
novelist, was an Irishman, and
his son, Sir Joseph Archer Crowe
(1825-1896) - who was, however,
reared in England - was also a
man of note as a diplomat, art
critic and war correspondent.
The
above is reproduced from http://www.goireland.com/genealogy/family.htm?FamilyId=115

Dorcy-D'Arcy
- (Nancy Custer Dorcey Group Administrator)
The Type III Irish group (Lineage IV in the Dorsey Project), I suspect, may indeed have come lately to the name.
There are only two members in the group.
One of the members uses the Dorcey spelling and one the D'Arcy.
They were unknown to each other prior to joining the project.
They cannot identify a common ancestor though they both trace back to Tipperary in the
mid-1800's. Apparently there was a period of time when those of Darcy/Dorcey/Dorchaidhe/etc origins aspired to be Norman (around the late 1700's, I think) and adopted the D'Arcy spelling to go with their R1b Irish Y chromosomes.
Incidentally, more and more of the Irish (non E3b) D'Arcys are dropping the apostrophe and assuming more indigenous
spellings - Darcy, Dorcey, etc - most of which derive from
O'Dorchaidhe.

(O)
Hogan
-
(Edward MacLysaght - Irish Families)
The
Hogans are a Dalcassian family, their
eponymous ancestor being Ógan who was
descended from an uncle of Brian Boru,
the most celebrated of all Kings of
Ireland. The Dalcassian territory
extended well beyond the boundaries of
Co. Clare which was the heart of
Thomond, their country. The Hogans
occupied the extreme north-eastern part
of it and their chief lived at Ardcrony,
near Nenagh, Co. Tipperary. The
name is numerous in Ireland, being among
the hundred commonest surnames.
The great majority of the eight thousand
or so persons so called (which is the
estimate of the present Hogan
population) belong toto their original
native habitat, being found today in Co.
Tipperary, Clare and Limerick. Fr.
Joh Ryan states that the O Hogans of
north Tipperary were of the Muscraíghe
and distinct from the Dalcassian Hogans
of Co. Clare. There are also a
number in Co. Cork, whose origin is
stated by O'Donovan to be different from
the Dalcassian Hogans. One of the
minor Corca Laoidhe septs was O'Hogan.
In Irish the name is Ó hÓgáin but the
prefix O is only occasionally met with
in the modern form in English. In
the seventeenth century the name was
often written Ogan. There is a
placename Ballyhogan in the parish of
Dysart, Co. Clare.

McGrath/McGraw/McCraw (Mac Craith)
- (Michael McGraw)
The origins of the McGrath of Co. Clare and descent from Echtighern, son of Cennedi and brother of Brian Boru, is detailed in two excellent papers by Michael McGraw
The Possibility of a Common McGrath Origin 9pp
http://mcgrathsearch.com/files/Common_Origins_10-24-05b.PDF
and The Origins of the McGrath family 272pp
http://mcgrathsearch.com/files/Version01_A.pdf

McNamara (Mac Conmara)
The sept of MacNamara was, after the O'Briens, the most important and powerful of the Dalcassians of Thomond.
They were hereditary marshals to the O'Briens and had the privilege of inaugurating their chief who was, of course, often a king.
There was frequent intermarriage between these two strong families.
The sept was originally confined to a small territory, but by the end of the eleventh century they had become lords of Clancullen (which comprises a great part of East Clare) and they are so described by the Four Masters many times at various dates between 1099 and 1600.
The sept in due course became two - the chief of West Clancullen (barony of BBBunratty) being MacNamara Fyne (i.e. fionn, fair), and the chief of East Clancullen (baronies of Upper and Lower Tulla) MacNamara Reagh (i.e. riabhach, swarthy or grizzled).
They earned a reputation as builders and are recorded as having built forty-two castles, fifteen fortresses and several friaries.
Macmiccon MacNamara Fionn received a papal bull authorising him to install Friars Minor in Quin Abbey, near Ennis, which he built in 1402.
Many of the family lie buried in the shadow of the now roofless abbey.
Like their ancient fortresses, the MacNamara seats are all in County Clare.
From the woods around Cratloe Castle, built in 1610, came the oaks for London's old Westminster Hall and the royal palace in Amsterdam.
Source:- http://www.araltas.com/features/mcnamara/

Noonan
- (Greg Noonan)
Noonan surname is said by DeCourcy to be Eoganacht, but by others to be Dal gCais, while the name of their tuath lands, Muscraighe Ui Nunain (Tullylease, County Cork, and Broadford/Dromcolliher, County Limerick), seems to imply that they are descendents of Carbri Musc ("Muscraighe").The presumed progenitor of the name, Flaithbheartach hIonmhinen, "of the blood royal", was abbot of Inis Cathaig in the Shannon estuary and king of Munster in 915. However the Fianna warrior
Cáel An Iarann
Ua Nemhnainn of Tulach Lèis appears to have the same surname and hometown of the Noonans
of Tullylease.
Neither one seems to have a lineage traceable further back in time.

O'Mahony
There are a great many O Mahonys in Ireland - the name is included, usually without the prefix O, among the hundred commonest surnames. It belongs almost exclusively to West Munster.
The vast majority of Mahony and O Mahony births are registered today in Co. Cork, the area historically associated with the sept.
O Mahony chieftains were powerful, often described as princes.
Their principal territory comprised the modern barony of Kinelmeaky and extended to the sea, with some fourteen castles on the coast of southwest Cork.
The name O Mathghamhnain modernized spelling O Mathunais derived from Mathghamhain (Irish for bear), the grandson of Brian Boru, though his daughter Sabh, who m. Cian, who is No. 109 on the "O'Mahony" pedigree, by whom she had Mathgabhuin, the founder of the family of O'Mahony, in the county Cork.
Mathghamhain was killed, with many more of the Desmond fighting men, at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014. (Edward MacLysaght, Irish Families and Diarmuid O Murchadha, Family Names of County Cork ) |
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In This Section


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What's New |
| Several
members are presently engaged in some SNP testing which
may help to direct others in their testing.
Each of the EA
markers, S121, S122, S123 and S124 are being
tested. We are expecting these to be ancestral
(-ve).
The newly discovered
SNP, L21 from FTDNA or (S145 from EA) is being tested
by three members. It will be interesting to see
if
our cluster is ancestral or derived for this SNP.
One member has already
ordered the four SNPs below L21, namely L7, L8, L9 and
L10. |
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