Descent from Cathair Mór, High King According to historian C. Thomas Cairney, the MacGormans were one of the chiefly families of the
Uí Bairrche who were a tribe of the
Erainn who were the second wave of Celts to settle in
Ireland between about 500 and 100
BC. The Uí Bairrche kindred of the
Laigin took their name from Dairé Barrach, a son of
Cathair Mór, who lived during the 2nd century AD. It is possible that they are mentioned in
Ptolemy’s
Geographia as the
Brigantes; it is unknown what connection, if any, they have to similarly named groups in Britain or Europe. Ptolemy may have simply used the term because of its phonetic similarity. In any case, Dairé lived at
Dún Ailinne, one of the ancient Gaelic royal sites of Ireland and capital of the Laigin, located in what is now
County Kildare. From here he gained a pupil in
Mug Nuadat, ancestor of the
Eóganachta, whom he supported in becoming King of Munster in conflict with
Conn of the Hundred Battles. Dáire himself may have been High King of Ireland for a “difficult month” if the 7th century AD poem about the early
Kings of Tara named
Baile Chuinn Chétchathaig is to be believed.
Kings of Leinster and the Uí Bairrche The
Uí Bairrche are thought to have originally held lands around what is today
County Wexford in the area named after them;
Bargy (Uí Bairrche). At this time they were very powerful, as one of the sons of Dáire Barrach named
Muiredach Mo Sníthech is listed by the 5th century poet
Laidcenn mac Bairchid, as a
King of Leinster and may have possibly even ruled at the
Hill of Tara. The kingship of the Uí Bairrche descended through another son of Dáire named Fiacha. What is known from this time is that the Uí Bairrche lost out in a power struggle with their cousins the
Uí Cheinnselaig, who as a consequence pushed them out of their lands and allowed the
Déisi Muman to settle there instead, according to the tales in the
Expulsion of the Déisi. Indeed, they only returned when Eochaidh Guinech of the Uí Bairrche killed his maternal grandfather
Crimthann mac Énnai, King of Leinster in 483. Eochaidh “took the oak with its root” (made total war) with the Déisi and subsequently drove part of them into
Ossory. 's mother Eithne was from the Uí Bairrche. The Uí Bairrche had an important role in the early days of the
Christian Church in Ireland. A member of the family,
Fiacha mac Breccáin was said to have been converted to Christianity by
Patrick himself. Fiacha was a bard and his uncle
Dubthach maccu Lugair was the
Chief Ollamh of Ireland; the conversion of the two helped to reconcile elements of native
Gaelic tradition with Christianity. Fiacha founded a monastery at
Sleaty and is considered a saint by Christians. His brother Ailill Mór mac Breccáin moved north during the political turmoil in Leinster and his grandson Sinnell mac Manach was Abbot of
Cleenish (
Cluan Innish) and later considered a saint; it is here, under
Sinnell, that
Columbanus began his studies. The mother of
Colm Cille (
Columba of Iona) named Eithne also descended from Ailill Mór mac Breccáin. Later on, in the 7th century, Aodh, the Abbot of Sleaty was the man who requested the writing of the
Vita sancti Patricii (Life of St. Patrick), contained in the
Book of Armagh. When the Uí Bairrche had returned to Leinster, they moved to
Slíabh Mairge (
Slievemargy), in what is today the south-east corner of
County Laois, as well as parts of
County Carlow and
County Kilkenny. The kindred still had a prominent position; the mother of
Diarmait mac Cerbaill (died 565), the last
High King of Ireland inaugurated according to the traditional Gaelic pagan rites, was Corbach, daughter of Maine, a member of the Uí Bairrche. A notable king of the age was
Cormac mac Diarmata, whom many Christian hagiographies associated with their rivals the Uí Cheinnselaig or the Osaraighe; such as that of
Abbán and
Cainnech of Aghaboe; paint him as pillaging monasteries and the like. Cormac and his brother Crimthann are also described as being in conflict with
Finnian of Clonard. Cormac was closely associated with
Comgall and gave him some lands, before retiring to become a monk at
Bangor.
"Gormandus" invades post-Roman Britain One of the more unusual stories is that of Gormáin mac Diarmata, another brother of Cormac. He is mentioned in various sources, including the
Annals of Ireland written by Friar
John Clyn and
Thady Dowling, the
Topography of Ireland by
Gerald of Wales, the
History of the Kings of Britain by
Geoffrey of Monmouth and even the
Annales of
William Camden. What these sources say is that around 593 AD, Gormáin invaded Britain, fought several battles and sacked a number of monasteries. He is said to have sacked the
Llanbadarn Fawr monastery,
Ceredigion and Camden claims the
Amesbury monastery containing three hundred monks was destroyed by him. His name is sometimes stylised differently such as Gormandus, Gordmundus or Gurmundus. In the account of Geoffrey of Monmouth he is bizarrely transformed into a king of Africa. Most of the native Annals in Ireland which are untouched by the Normans and
Arthurian literature are quiet on the matter.
Uí Bairrche interaction with the Vikings , which is named in Gaeilge,
Loch Garman. In the 7th century, Suibhne mac Domhnall; grandson of Cormac mac Diarmata; came into conflict with
Fintán of Taghmon (died 635), also known as
Munnu. After allegedly being insulted by Suibhne, this abbot made a prophecy which envisaged that Subhne would have his head cut off by his own brother and that his severed head would be thrown in the River Barrow. Suibhne's brother Failbe eventually married Eithne, daughter of
Crundmael mac Rónáin, King of the Uí Cheinnselaig. Various branches of the Uí Bairrche are mentioned in the
Annals of the Four Masters with the advent of the
Viking Age in Ireland. This includes Conn mac Cinaedh (died 866) of the
Uí Bairrche Tire, who we are told died while “demolishing the fortress of the foreigners”, most likely the settlement at Dublin on the
River Liffey. Around the area of Uí Bairrche and the Laigin more generally, we know that the Vikings pillaged
Dún Másc in 842 and established a settlement at
Loch Garman (later known as Wexford), close to Bargy.
Mac Gormáin in Airgíalla as clerics Just prior to the
Norman invasion of Ireland, a number of Mac Gormáin are found to have been in prominent clerical roles as writers and teachers. Some of the most significant of these were invited to
Airgíalla by
Donnchadh Ó Cearbhaill. A religious reformer and a prominent political player, Donnchadh had just conquered territory from the
Conaille Muirtheimne (what is today
County Louth) and established
Arrouaisian Order religious foundations at
Louth,
Knockabbey and
Termonfeckin there. From the Mac Gormáin family,
Máel Caoimhghin Mac Gormáin was put in place as the master of Louth and abbot of Termonfeckin and
Máel Muire Mac Gormáin as the abbot of Knockabbey. Máel Muire (Marianus) is the man who authored the
Martyrology of Gorman in 1166. There were other prominent Mac Gormáín clerics in the north around this time;
Fionn Mac Gormáin,
Bishop of Kildare and abbot of
Newry (also founded by Donnchadh Ó Cearbhaill, on the encouragement of
Maelmhaedhoc Ó Morgair), who helped to author the
Book of Leinster with
Áed mac Crimthainn and finally
Flann Mac Gormáin (1099–1174), the chief lector of the School of Armagh and all Ireland. The latter spent twenty-one years at universities in Paris and Oxford before working on the development of a similar institution at Armagh. This had been established by
Ruairí Ó Conchubhair, High King of Ireland and was dedicated to Patrick. This school was never allowed to develop to its full potential as it was soon destroyed by the
Normans. It is likely that the latter-day Gormans and McGormans of
County Monaghan and
County Antrim originate from this population movement. Mac Gormáin heritage in the north is remembered in several place names referencing them. The majority of these are in County Monaghan;
Feartach Ghormáin (Fartagorman) in
Magheross,
Coill Uí Ghormáin (Killygorman) in
Killeevan, and
Lios Gormáin (Lisdungorman) in
Clontibret. Aside from this, there is also a
Ráth Gormáin (Rathgorman) in
County Down.
Mac Gormáin pushed out to Thomond at
Thurles. Murchadh mac Eachthighearn was driven from his territories of Uí Bairrche by the Norman invaders
Walter de Riddlesford,
John de Clahull and
Hugh de Lacy during the 1170s. Riddlesford, who took over as a master at
Carlow, had married the daughter of a bastard son of a king
Henry I of England which left him in a prominent position among his own people. At first Murchadh settled at Daire Seanleath in Uaithne Cliach (what is today
Owney, County Limerick), but his son Cumeth mac Murchadh was invited by
Donnchadh Cairprech Ó Briain, King of Thomond to settle in
Uí Bhreacáin (what is known as
Ibrickan,
County Clare). In fact the Mac Gormáin had built a good relationship with the Ó Briain prior to the Norman invasion, as early as 1168, as Scanlan mac Gormáin supported
Domhnall Mór Ó Briain, by witnessing for him a charter to the
Holy Cross Abbey, Thurles. One of the most notable members of the family was a female, who became Queen of Thomond. Éadaoin Nic Ghormáin (1321–1367) married
Muirchertach Ó Briain (1289–1343), King of Thomond and they included among their children, two further kings;
Mathghamhain Maonmhaighe Ó Briain (died 1369) and
Toirdelbach Maol Ó Briain (died 1398). Their descendants include the rest of the Kings of
Thomond. The context in which this marriage came about, is to be taken from the famous 14th century literary work
Caithréim Thoirdhealbhaigh ("The Triumphs of Turlough"), which mentions that the Mac Gormáin family had become Standard Bearers of the Clann Tadhg branch of the Ó Briain, stating that Cuebha Mac Gormáin was for Muirchertach's father
Toirdelbach mac Tadhg Ó Briain his "close door of protection while he slept and, on the battlefield, the shield that covered him." arms: the Mac Gormáin supported Clann Tadhg against the Norman de Clares. The
Wars of Thomond, as the events of these times were called, were essentially a civil war between two rival branches of the Ó Briain; the conflicting branches were known as Clann Tadhg and Clann Brian Ruadh. There was also the added factor of Norman divide and rule intrigue. Briain Ruadh Ó Briain and his nephew Toirdelbach mac Tadhg Ó Briain came into conflict over the kingship of Thomond. As part of a plan to win back the kingdom, Briain Ruadh went to
Thomas de Clare (a Norman), close friend of king
Edward I of England and attempted to enlist his support in return for land to colonise. A seven-year civil war ensued with Toirdelbach emerging victorious, with help from the
Mac Con Mara,
Ó Deághaidh and of course, the Mac Gormáin clans. Evidently, having been driven West by the Normans in the first place, the Mac Gormáin were not willing to be turned out again. Throughout the rest of the period of Gaelic rule in Thomond, the Mac Gormáin continued to hold a significant position in society. Indeed,
Domhnall Mac Gormáin (died 1484) was described as the wealthiest man in all of Ireland in terms of the livestock in his possession. The king during this period would have been
Conchobhar na Srona Ó Briain. It must be remembered that, during Domhnall's life, cattle was the main element of the pastoral economy; the Gaelic kingdoms did not mint their own coinage. So to be wealthy in terms of livestock was the main measure of wealth in
Gaelic Ireland. The Mac Gormáin were known having open houses, nourishing the poor and being patrons of a bardic poet, especially the
Mac Bruaideadha family. Indeed,
Tadhg mac Dáire Mhic Bhruaideadha authored a poem about them.
Mac Gormáin in Tudor and Stuart Ireland In the year 1543, Thomond joined the
Kingdom of Ireland under the
Tudor dynasty of the king
Henry VIII of England. The formerly sovereign King of Thomond,
Murchadh Carrach Ó Briain became the
Earl of Thomond in the
peerage of Ireland. His nephew,
Donnchadh Ó Briain, who had long since joined the English service, became
Baron Ibrackan (named for the territory associated with the Mac Gormáin). During the reign of the
Stuart dynasty king
James I of England, the Mac Gormáin held lands from Tadhg Caech Mac Mathghamha, Lord of West
Corcavaskin, specifically named lands in their hands include;
Clooncullin,
Kilmacduane,
Ballynagur,
Moyarta,
Knockerra,
Clohanbeg,
Clohamore and Cahermurphy. During the reign of
Charles I of England, Máel Sechlainn Mac Gormáin (died 1 May 1605) held lands at
Drom Oilche (
Dromelihy) and passed them onto his son Diarmuid Mac Gormáin. At
Drom Díogais (
Drumdigus) we find lands held by Tadhg Mac Gormáin (died 1630) also the owner of
Tulach an Chrainn (
Tullycrine) and known for his wife's association with a certain "holy well” at
Kilmihil. There was also a Scannláin Mac Gormáin who owned the castle at Cathair Murchadha (
Cahermurphy) in the early 1620s.
1641 Rebellion and Civil War in Clare The 1640s were a particularly troublesome period, with the Rising of 1641 and all of the events which followed it, including the
Irish Confederate Wars and finally the landing of
Oliver Cromwell in 1649; The Mac Gormáin of Cahermurphy actually took part in one of the most significant and controversial events in Thomond of the
Rebellion of 1641 and that was the Siege of
Tromra Castle. The castle had been taken over by English Protestant settlers, the family of Peter Ward, protected by Sir
Domhnall Ó Briain. An ambitious raid on the castle, looking to take livestock, was led by
Edmond O'Flaherty from the
Aran Islands, joined by men from
Connemara (what used to be
Iar Connacht). Some of the local clans of Thomond also joined in. Three members of the Ward family died but the rest made it out to safety, fleeing to Dublin. In 1641, Dromelihy was under the ownership of Domhnall Mac Gormáin, Cathair Mac Gormáin and Sir Domhnall Ó Briain. After the victory of the Cromwellian side during the conflict, certain Catholics in other parts of Ireland were “transplanted” to
Connacht (which then included County Thomond), to make way for the Protestant English incomers on better lands. This included the Norman-descended Catholics, Annie and Martha Eustace who were; according to the
Act of Settlement 1662; transplanted into the lands of what was Mac Gormáin territory in Dromelihy. Ó Briain himself still remained a land owner in the area and was raised to
Viscount Clare in 1662. After the overthrow of
James II of England in the
Revolution of 1688 and the failure of the
Jacobites during the
Williamite War in Ireland, these lands were going to be "given" to the Dutchman,
Arnold van Keppel, Earl of Albemarle but as he had no interest in them they were instead “given” over to
Francis Burton,
Nicholas Westby and
James MacDonnell in 1698. According to John Robert O'Gorman, a Catholic priest from
Canada; he found information at the Records Office in Dublin about the fate of the Tullycrine estate and found that Máel Sechlainn Mac Gormáin's property was confirmed by Charles II in 1679 to have passed to one Captain William Hamilton. Family tradition; especially among the diaspora in North America where some descendants ended up; states the land was confiscated during Cromwellian times and this may have simply been a confirmation of an earlier fact. They are later found around their former estates as simply tenant farmers at Tarmon. A significant number of Gormans moved out of County Clare into
County Tipperary.
Ascendancy Ireland, Penal Laws and decline During the
Penal Laws, Catholics were persecuted and blocks put in their way to stop them from owning significant tracts of land and generally building themselves up in society. It is this social situation which would eventually lead to the
Great Hunger in the 1840s. Although the majority of the Gormans remained Catholic, a number converted to the Anglican
Church of Ireland for pragmatic reasons. These are listed by
James Frost as Sylvester Gorman of Drumellihy in 1750, James Gorman of
Killilahane in 1758 and finally Thady Gorman of
Sheeaun in 1766. The last two are described as gentlemen.
Chevalier Thomas O’Gorman also lived during this time period. He was a Jacobite from near Tullycrine and served with the
Irish Brigade of the
French Army. He married into the French aristocracy but lost out during the
French Revolution. He was a noted genealogist, owning for some time the
Book of Ballymote.
Emancipation and Irish nationalism A number of members of the family, under the name O'Gorman, played a prominent role in Irish national politics.
Nicholas Purcell O'Gorman (1778–1857) was a barrister who worked with
Daniel O'Connell, "the Liberator" towards the goal of
Catholic Emancipation in Ireland; indeed O'Gorman was the Secretary of the
Catholic Association. One of his sons, Major
Purcell O'Gorman (1818–1888) was a Member of Parliament for Waterford City as a member of the
Home Rule League and a supporter of
Parnell. His older brother,
Nicholas Smith O'Gorman, was a
High Sheriff of Clare. A nationalist figure, the
O'Gorman Mahon, also carried the family name, but this was from his mother Barbara O'Gorman. On the more radical republican end of the political spectrum,
Richard O'Gorman (1820–1895) was a member of the
Young Ireland movement which rose in the
Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848. Indeed, along with
William Smith O'Brien and
Thomas Francis Meagher, he visited the newly formed
Second French Republic in 1840 and returned with the
Irish Tricolour which later became the national flag after 1922. ==Symbols==