The first known human presence in Ireland after the last ice age has been determined as c.10,500 years B.C. When the original
Celts of Ireland actually arrived is unknown, with suggestions having been made of between 100 and 5000 years
B.C. from
linguistic and other evidence. The late
Neolithic Beaker folk introduced their
cultural advances possibly from the
Low Countries or from
Iberia; this resulted in key changes and Irish becoming a unique
Celtic language. Recent evidence shows a huge number of Irish men have the R1b
DNA marker with similarly high percentages also found in other modern Celtic areas on the European Atlantic coast, including the
Basque region. The first known
farmers in Ireland or
Britain landed in Kerry c.4350 B.C. but the incidence of their DNA markers is now very scarce, the R1b marker replacing it c.2500 B.C. This coincides well with the arrival of a dominant Beaker culture, including the introduction of
copper mining and
metallurgy in Kerry. In 2011,
archaeologists working on the site of the realignment of the N69 Tralee-Listowel road found evidence for early
Bronze Age and
mediaeval activity in the townlands of
Gortclohy and
Cloonnafinneela. The Gortclohy dig provided evidence for tool usage from the Beaker period;
alder charcoal from the site was
carbon-dated to between 2132 and 1920 B.C. This is the most northerly evidence for the Beaker folk in County Kerry. The first Cloonnafinneela dig provided evidence of early mediaeval
iron-working, with
oak and alder charcoal carbon-dated to between 432 and 595 A.D. and further evidence of pit-
kiln charcoal production 200–300 years later. A second dig at Cloonafinneela gave up evidence of various plants as burnt roofing thatch including
rushes,
cereals, hazel, oak and
willow charcoal, the hazel dated to between 1450 and 1635 A.D. Kilflynn is in the middle of the area settled in the first century by the
Ciarraighe (also Ciarraigh or Ciarraidh], the
mediaeval tribe (from which the county name Kerry is derived) and claimed descendants of Ciar the son of the mythological queen
Medb of
Connacht and one of her lovers, king
Fergus mac Róich of
Ulster. Prior to this the Velabri around Kerry Head and further south the
Iverni people (or Iernoi from the earlier
Greek) were noted by
Ptolemy to be concentrated in the south-west area of Ireland, speaking the most primitive
Goidelic language similar to
Gaulish (as recorded on
Ogham stones, with examples found close by in Knockbrack and
Tralee, from the 6th Century). The
Érainn, in Irish tradition, may be the name for the same group of people as there are linguistic links. Kilflynn was a historical
civil parish in the
barony of Clanmaurice. This barony developed from the area which had been in the control of native leaders (especially O'Conors) but was taken over by the
Norman, Maurice, son of
Thomas FitzGerald of Shanid who died in 1213. Thomas FitzGerald himself was son of
Maurice FitzGerald, Lord of Llanstephan, who had supported 'Strongbow',
Lord Pembroke, in his
Cambro-Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169 and who began the
Geraldine dynasty in Ireland and their
House of Desmond. Later
earls of all County Kerry were scions of the
FitzMaurice barons. Kilflynn has sixteen constituent townlands:
Ballyconnell,
Cappagh,
Castletown,
Cloghaneleskirt,
Cloonnafinneela,
Crotta,
Fahavane,
Glanballyma,
Gortclohy, Kilflynn (village),
Knockbrack East,
Knockbrack West,
Knocknahila,
Rea,
Stack's Mountain and
Tooreen. The Stack family, also of Norman heritage, had their seat at Crotto (later known as Crotta) just north of Kilflynn and also owned surrounding townlands. , 1823 Kilflynn had been known as Stackstown, and the name remains geographically in
Stack's Mountains south-east of Kilflynn. The family landowners, namely James (owner of Garrynagore, Gortclohy and Cloghanaleskirt), John (owner of Aghacoora), Richard (owner of Killaspicktarvin (and more northerly townlands)) and Thomas Stack (owner of Gortaneare, Ballyconnell, Castletown, Crotta, Glanballyma, Knocknahila, Cloonnafinneela, and Cappagh) forfeited their landed possessions because of their support for the
Irish Rebellion of 1641 and the subsequent
Catholic Confederation. The reconquest of Ireland between 1649 and 1652 by
Cromwellian forces after the
English Civil War resulted in the
Act for the Settlement of Ireland of 1652 which required a survey for the redistribution of land (hence Sir
William Petty's survey) often to invading soldiers in lieu of wages. Henry Ponsonby, the younger brother of Sir John Ponsonby (a colonel of horse in the
New Model Army), was the recipient of most of the Stacks' (and others') confiscated land - much of which was profitable. This was reconfirmed in 1666, after the
Acts of Settlement. Part of the Down's Survey was Pender's Census, taken between 1654 and 1659. The census refers to 'The Barony of Clanmorice', the townland of 'Crottoe' and the 'Tituladoe' as Henry Ponsonby Esq. The population for the whole of Clanmaurice is given as 1126, of whom 86 are English and 1040 Irish. There are 17 with the surname 'Stack' and 17 with 'FitzMorrice and MacMorrice'. Ponsonby built Crotta House in 1669. The house was sold in 1842 by Thomas Carrique Ponsonby (later resident in
Dublin, so this possibly marked the end of the Ponsonbys in Kerry) and was being leased by about 1850 by Lieutenant Colonel Henry Horatio Kitchener, father to
Horatio Herbert Kitchener, the first Earl Kitchener, Earl of
Khartoum,
Field Marshal of the
British Army and
Minister for War for
Great Britain, who spent most of his youth at Crotta. The mostly derelict remains of the house itself collapsed or were demolished in the 20th century. From 1840 the
Poor Law Union plans (as basic administrative division) of
Listowel replaced the Norman Clanmaurice barony and civil parish boundaries (although the latter continued to be used to make comparisons) after the
Poor Relief (Ireland) Act 1838. Kilflynn was on the main road from
Tralee to County
Limerick. Farming was the principal industry for centuries and services such as
forges for
smithing, and
lime kilns from the late 1600s (to make lime for acidic soils) developed around this. Local forges were still operational in the mid-20th century. The remains of some kilns can still be found dotted about the landscape. There was a population decline, possibly partly associated with the opening of what is now the main Tralee-Listowel road to the south in 1846, and then the North Kerry railway line with stations opening at Abbeydorney and Lixnaw in 1880 (the line ceasing services entirely from 1978). However, there was also from the 1840s onwards the significant effect of the peak years of the
Great Famine in which between 20% and 30% of the population of Kerry died or emigrated (see map). In 1841, 1851 and 1861 the population of Kilflynn village was 147, 134 and 119 respectively (in 2011 it was 126). The area covers two
election districts (Kilflynn and Kilfeighny) so these figures may not be entirely representative. == History from 1900 ==