| O'Regan's Athenry
Mythology, History
and Stories from the 'Fields of Athenry'
Turlach Airt - The Battle of Moyvilla
A friend of mine once described the parish of Athenry as a place where
it would be impossible to die of thirst as it had a pub in each corner
thereof and several pubs in the centre. The parish stretches from Egan’s
(pub) in Coshla to
Laffertey’s in Cahertymore and from Burke’s in Colemanstown to Holland’s
Brier in Moyvilla.
I live in the shadow of one of these pubs in the townland of Moyvilla,
on the most southerly part of the parish and indeed the diocese of Tuam
where it snuggles unobtrusively into the diocese of Galway by which it
is bounded on three sides.
Moyvilla is an area of fertile, arable land of some seven hundred acres
approximately and a commonage of about one hundred acres. This commonage
is now shared by twelve farmers and is commonly known as ‘the Turlach’.
’Turlach is the Irish name for a winter lake.
This turlach is in my opinion the most historic part of the parish
of Athenry and is celebrated in all the Irish histories and authentic annals
from as early as 245 A.D. – two hundred years before the coming of St.
Patrick.
It was recorded then as ‘Turlach Airt’ because it was the scene of
the Battle of Moyvilla fought between Art the Solitary, Monarch of Ireland
and Lughaidh Mac Conn. Lughaidh had been exiled for maladministration of
laws and resolved to be avenged and returned by sea with a powerful foreign
army. He landed at Maree near Oranmore and pitched his camp there for seven
days, giving a chance to his influential to gather further troops among
the Irish. We are told that Fionn Mac Cumhail, although general-in-chief
of the Irish forces, sold his loyalty to Lughaidh. Lughaidh then marched
from Maree towards Athenry. The Monarch Art, undeterred by the disloyalty
and defection of Fionn, met the invaders at the turlach. The contest was
a fierce one, many leading princes were killed and Art himself was slain
by Lughaidh who severed his body in two with his sword. According to legend,
Art’s horse bolted, with the body of Art on its back. Nearing Kilcornan
one half of the body fell from the horse onto a rock. This rock was called
‘Cloch-leath-Airt’ (the rock of half of Art) and gives its name to the
present day townland of Cloglahard. After his victory Lughaidh was proclaimed
High King of Ireland.
The same ‘Turlach Airt’ is recorded again as the scene of another bloody
contest in 1067, between Hugh O’Connor, King of Connaught and O’Ruairc
of Breffini where O’Connor was killed and his death recorded by the annalists.
One historian when referring to Turlach Airt suggested that “it would
be creditable to have a monument erected in that spot”. So far the suggestion
has remained unheeded and poor Art and his historic battlefield have been
ruthlessly consigned to the realms of oblivion: ‘unwept, unhonoured and
unsung’.
Lena Conroy- the Athenry Journal, August 1995
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