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				<title><![CDATA[Offaly Historical &amp; Archaeological Society - Articles - ]]></title>
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					  <title><![CDATA[Introducing Offaly]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.offalyhistory.com/articles/7/1/Introducing-Offaly/Page1.html</link>
					  <description><![CDATA[<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: Arial; font-size: 10pt;">The Irish Midlands, which are in every sense 
        the antithesis of the English Midlands for they are sumptuously rural, 
        with many of the roads lined by tall and splendid beech trees, horse chestnuts 
        and aged oaks. Great flat stretches of the bog are, in summertime, sprinkled 
        with feathery white and yellow flowers; many of the roads crossing the 
        bog have become switchbacks from subsidence caused by the bog-water on 
        which they are laid down. But, apart from their natural beauties, the 
        Midlands abound in well-preserved ruins of abbeys, friaries, forts and 
        castles, which seem from a distance, moored in the bogs and meadows. Here 
        flocks of gregarious sheep and more solitary cows and bullocks mooch and 
        graze on the course green grass spattered with buttercups and daisies 
        beneath the windswept Irish sky.</span><span style="font-weight: bold;"><br/><br/></span></div><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span><div style="text-align: right;"><div style="text-align: justify;"><br/><span style="font-family: Arial; font-size: 10pt;">Set in the heart of the Irish Midlands and 
        the vale of the Shannon, Offaly is a place of ease, rest and contentment.<br/><br/>If Offaly is sometimes described as undiscovered 
        country, it is no backwater and the visitor will be pleasantly surprised 
        at the way in which the well cared for and prosperous towns and villages 
        sit in the quiet and generally flat landscape.<br/><br/>Offaly presents an excellent opportunity 
        for people of all ages to enjoy an excitingly varied holiday in unspoilt 
        surroundings; the climate is mild with bright spring days and temperate 
        summer weather giving way to a rich colourful autumn.<br/><br/>Comprising only some 50,000 hectares and 
        with a population of some 60,000 people the county is famous for its bogs, 
        meadows and tree lined roads. On the eastern side bordering Kildare the 
        county is largely flat save for the historic Croghan Hill - itself the 
        stump of an extinct volcano of some 250 million years ago. To the south 
        bordering Laois are the Slieve Bloom mountains, where the oldest rocks 
        in Laois and Offaly will be found ranging in age from 300 to 450 million 
        years ago.<br/><br/>Of more recent age are the eskers being the 
        sinuous ridges and hills of sand and gravel which are associated with 
        the ice age and are so much a characteristic of Offaly. Superb examples 
        can be seen at Clonmacnoise, from Banagher to Birr and Birr to Tullamore. 
        Another range can be seen connecting Rahugh in Westmeath to Clonmacnoise. 
        The ancient roads and not surprisingly many of the existing roads run 
        alongside the eskers, the natural causeways of earlier times.<br/><br/>Of the rivers, the Barrow divides the county 
        from neighbouring Laois at Portarlington, the Tullamore river and the 
        Silver river flow into the Clodiagh which joins the Brosna which in turn 
        flows into the great River Shannon. The Shannon river is the boundary 
        on the western side of the county separating Offaly from the counties 
        of Galway and Roscommon. The Camcor river flows through the town of Birr 
        and into the Little Brosna which can be seen at Riverstown and Birr Demesne. 
        The Little Brosna joins the Shannon at Meelick.<br/><br/>Running through the county from Edenderry 
        in the east to Shannon Harbour in the west is the 200 year old Grand Canal 
        with harbours at Edenderry, Tullamore and Shannon Harbour.<br/><br/>Lakes in the county were few until the recent 
        development of the Boora Parklands. In the centre of the county is the 
        man made, Charleville Lake near a bird sanctuary and to the south of it 
        Pallas Lake. Some years ago it was thought that the only evidence of early 
        human activity in Ireland was in the north - east but thanks to archaeological 
        excavations at Boora near Kilcormac we now know that Boora held an encampment 
        for hunters some 6800 - 6000 BC. The hunting site lay on the pre-bog surface 
        on the shore of a lake much larger than the modern Lough Boora. Evidence 
        of settlement in the early part of the Bronze age was also found near 
        Kilcormac as was the impressive gold collection, the Derrinboy hoard and 
        the famous Dowris hoard of the later Bronze age 900 - 600 BC. The latter 
        associated with ritual and possibly a 'bull cult'.<br/><br/>Of our ancestors the people of Offaly, some 
        150,000 before the Great Famine (1845 - 49) and near 60,000 today are 
        largely English speaking since the 1800s. The people of the county appear 
        on linguistic evidence to come from Connaght and Leinster with only those 
        south of Birr coming from Munster.<br/><br/>The linguistic evidence is not surprising. 
        The county of Offaly established in 1557 with the lands of the O'Connor 
        Faly, the principal native family, was part of the ancient kingdom of 
        Leinster. The land of the O'Molloys in the Tullamore district was added 
        to the new county as was that of the Mac Coughlan (now west Offaly) in 
        1570. These districts formed part of the old kingdom of Meath or 'middle 
        kingdom'. The territory south of Birr, the land of the O'Carroll known 
        as Ely O Carroll, was incorporated in the county in 1605. Ely O'Carroll 
        was part of ancient Munster. The parish of Clonmacnois was incorporated 
        in the King's County in 1638. Minor changes were made to the county boundaries 
        in the 1830s and the name was changed from King's County to County Offaly 
        in 1920 as an act of local defiance of British government in Ireland during 
        the course of the Anglo-Irish war of 1919-21 and to commemorate the principal 
        local gaelic family, the O'Connor Faly.<br/><br/>Today the County has almost 20,000 at work 
        in a population of 60,000 and has attracted many new high technology industries 
        to supplement the native base.</span> </div></div>]]></description>
					  <author>no@spam.com (James Pope Hennessy)</author>
					  <pubDate>Sat, 01 Sep 2007 08:15:49 IST</pubDate>
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