Knockananna

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CountryIreland
Elevation
205 m (673 ft)
Knockananna
Irish: Cnoc an Eanaigh
Village
Centre of Knockananna
Centre of Knockananna
Knockananna is located in Ireland
Knockananna
Knockananna
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°52′26″N 6°29′35″W / 52.874000°N 6.493000°W / 52.874000; -6.493000
CountryIreland
ProvinceLeinster
CountyCounty Wicklow
Elevation
205 m (673 ft)
Population
  Total
143
Irish Grid ReferenceT010814

Knockananna (Irish: Cnoc an Eanaigh, meaning 'hill of the marsh')[2] is a village in County Wicklow, Ireland. After Roundwood, it is the second-highest village in Ireland.[3]

In Liam Price's extensive survey of place names of County Wicklow his earliest record of Knockananna is dated 1714 using the current spelling. A 1715 record uses Knockannana. The Straughan family deeds use a different spelling; Knockinana in 1717. Finally the village name shown in A.R. Neville's Map of County Wicklow from circa 1810 is Knockanana.[4] A grave accent has been added in the 1989 Gazetteer of Ireland making Knockànanna to provide a guide to proper stressing in pronouncing the name correctly.[5] Price mentions two local names: Boorawn being derived from baudrán a basket covered in cow-hide and Kish, from ceis the name of part of the bog.[4]

Geography

Knockananna lies close to the border between County Wicklow and County Carlow. The village is the centre of a dispersed farming area, 2 km to the north-west of Moyne and the Wicklow Way.[6]

People

During the late 18th century and early 19th century a priest by the name of Fr. John Blanchfield (Blanchvelle) was active in Knockananna and Hacketstown.[3] He was interred in the old church in Knockananna.[7] The old church was renamed the Blanchelle Centre in his honour.[8][9] The village is served by the Church of the Immaculate Conception which was built in 1978.[3]

Colonel Commandant Tom Kehoe (Free State Forces) was born in the area in 1899. He was a member of Michael Collins's assassination Squad, which killed a number of British agents on 21 November 1920.[10] Kehoe himself died from severe wounds he received while attempting to remove a booby trapped land mine during the civil war in Macroom in September 1922.[11]

Irish singer and songwriter Órla Fallon was born in Knockananna in 1974.[12]

In early 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic until 2022 after her son Shane had committed suicide, the singer Sinéad O'Connor lived in Knockananna.[13]

Services

References

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