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{{distinguish|Tyranny}}
{{distinguish|Tyranny}}
'''Tiranny''' ({{Irish derived place name|Tuath Threana|territory of Trena}})<ref name="PDI"/><ref name="Archive"/> is a [[Barony (country subdivision)|barony]] in [[County Armagh]], [[Northern Ireland]].<ref name="PRONI"/> It lies on the western boundary of the county, bordering [[County Tyrone]] to its west and [[County Monaghan]] ([[Republic of Ireland]]) to its south. It is bordered by five other baronies: [[Dungannon Lower]] and [[Dungannon Upper]] to the north-west; [[Armagh (barony)|Armagh]] to the east; Cremorne to the south and Trough to the west.<ref name="PRONI"/>
'''Tiranny''' ({{Irish derived place name|Tuath Threana|territory of Trena}})<ref name="PDI"/><ref name="Archive"/> is a [[Barony (country subdivision)|barony]] in [[County Armagh]], [[Northern Ireland]].<ref name="PRONI"/> It lies on the western boundary of the county, bordering [[County Tyrone]] to its west and [[County Monaghan]] ([[Republic of Ireland]]) to its south. It is bordered by three other baronies in Northern Ireland: [[Dungannon Lower]] and [[Dungannon Upper]] to the north-west; and [[Armagh (barony)|Armagh]] to the east.<ref name="PRONI"/> It also borders two baronies in the Republic of Ireland; Cremorne to the south and Trough to the west.


==Eptymology==
==Eptymology==

Revision as of 12:04, 1 February 2011

Tiranny (from Irish Tuath Threana, meaning 'territory of Trena')[1][2] is a barony in County Armagh, Northern Ireland.[3] It lies on the western boundary of the county, bordering County Tyrone to its west and County Monaghan (Republic of Ireland) to its south. It is bordered by three other baronies in Northern Ireland: Dungannon Lower and Dungannon Upper to the north-west; and Armagh to the east.[3] It also borders two baronies in the Republic of Ireland; Cremorne to the south and Trough to the west.

Eptymology

The name Tiranny is a softened form of Toughranie,[4] an anglicisation of Tuath Threana. The form Tiranny was created by the Ordnace Survey and led to the incorrect conjecture by some such as John O'Donovan that the first element of the name derived from the Irish word Tir meaning "country".[2]

Older phonetic forms of Tuatha Threna included; Toaghrany, Toyghrayny, Toaghraine, Toaghranye, Towrany, Tuterany, Toghrany, Toorany, Turrany, and Torany, all of which are found in records from the early seventeenth-century.[2]

The second element Threna is derived from the Uí Threna (Template:Lang-en), the name of a tribe that settled on the western boundaries of modern County Armagh, where the barony of Tiranny is located. In various Elizabethan maps of Ulster, they are recorded in the anglicised forms of; O'Traney, O'Trany, Outraine, and Traney, before the term Tuath Threana was used.[2]

History

The Uí Threna were descended from Trena, the great-grandson of Colla Fo Chrí, one of the Three Collas,[2] and where part of the over-kingdom of Airgíalla.

In the north-east of Tiranny, south of the River Blackwater there was a sub-territory called Clanaul, the original name of the parish of Eglish. The name is preserved in the form Glenaul which was used as the name for the local District Electoral Division of the former Armagh Poor Law Union.[2] The name derives from the Irish Cluain Dabhail, which means "meadow of Dabhal", noted as the ancient name of the River Blackwater.[2] Clanaul is also recorded as Clandavle, and in the Tynan Charter of 1455 as Clondowyll.[5][2]

To the east of Tiranny lay the territory of Tuath Echach (Template:Lang-en), anglicised as Tooaghy, now the barony of Armagh.[6] It takes its name from the Uí Echach (Template:Lang-en), whose ancestor Echach was the brother of Trena the ancestor of the Uí Threna. They are also recorded as the Uí Eochaidh.[2]

List of main settlements

List of civil parishes

Below is a list of all the civil parishes within Tiranny:[7]

  • Eglish (split with barony of Armagh)
  • Derrynoose (split with barony of Armagh)
  • Keady (split with barony of Armagh)
  • Tynan (split with barony of Armagh)

References