BEGINNERS' BLAS
SLOINNTE/ SURNAMES

Ó Dochartaigh This name, which is synonymous with N. Donegal and the Derry
area, means desc. of Dochartach, meaning hurtful or harmful one. The adjective
dochar can easily be seen in it. The Ó Dochartaigh were a branch
of the Cenel Chonaill and were therefore of the same stock as the Ó
Dónaill name discussed earlier in the series. They increased their
power and standing throughout the later medieval period and became lords
of Inis Eoghain in the beginning of the 15th century. They retained this
position until the confiscation of their lands at the beginning of the
17th century when the area was granted to Sir Arthur Chichester. Ó
Dochartaigh and simply Doherty where the Ó has been dropped are
common names throughout Ulster but very prevalent in the Derry and Donegal
area.
Ó Donnghaile
The history and fortunes of the name Ó Donnghaile mirror to a certain
extent those of Ó Dochartaigh and other names of families which
had a stake in society under the Gaelic system. The name itself means
desc. of Donnghal, meaning brown valour, or fighting fury. What brown
means in this context, as with its appearance in other names, is unclear
. Donnghal itself is a personal name, and it is from its bearer, a descendant
of a brother of Niall Glúndubh, ancestor of the Uí Néill,
that all northern Ó Donnghaile are descended. The seat of the Uí
Dhonnghaile was at Ballydonnelly, now Castlecaulfield near Dungannon.
It was there that the famous Shane O’Neill was fostered. The name
changed upon the confiscation of the land in the seventeenth century and
its being granted to Sir Toby Caulfield. The Ó Donnghaile family
were hereditary marshals and generals of the forces of Ó Néill,
and they fought at Kinsale where it is reported that one Dónall
Ó Donnghaile and a hundred of his kinsmen were killed.
The name has spread throughout Ireland but is still most prevalent in
Ulster.
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