Talk:Dunshaughlin

Latest comment: 12 years ago by 87.42.107.23 in topic Dún Seachlainn & Domhnach Seachnaill

Lagore edit

Lagore is not in Dunshaughlin, it is in the Parish of Ratoath. Its postal address may be Dunshaughlin but the crannóg is in the Ratoath parish.


Dún Seachlainn & Domhnach Seachnaill edit

Just for the record, Dún Seachlainn is officially the name of the village in the Irish now (since Bobby Molloy's Placenames Act of 1973). Growing up we were always told it was Domhnach Seachnaill, and it is that name which I've always used on my address, and which I prefer. I put a question to the Placenames Commission in the Phoenix Park some years back and the learned man on the other end of the line told me that both versions have equal legitimacy: the former in the secular records; the latter in the ecclesiastical records. Deirdre Flanagan'sassertion that the form 'Dunshaughlin' as a corrupt form of Domhnach Seachnaill dates from the seventeenth century is incorrect if we are to accept the existence of the form 'Donshaughlin' in the Privy Council records in the sixteenth century. 193.1.172.163 01:19, 20 May 2006 (UTC)Reply

Domhnach Seachnaill is the Irish version that the locals use. The schools, clubs, pubs and the people call it Domhnach Seachnaill in Irish.
Logainm.ie, the excellent website of the Irish Placenames' Commission, has Dún Seachlainn recorded as the 'ainm deimhnithe' ('validated name') while Domhnach Seachnaill is recorded as the 'ainm stairiúil' ('historical name') here.Captain Fearnought (talk) 20:00, 17 April 2010 (UTC)Reply
Patrick O'Keefe and John O'Donovan went around Meath in the 1830s on behalf of the Ordnance Survey Office. Their notes on the placenames of Meath can be seen in Ordnance Survey Letters County Meath, edited by Michael Herity (Four Masters Press, Dublin, 2001). Written in O'Keefe's hand, having spoken in Irish to local people, is the following: 'Dunshaughlin is always in Irish called Dún Seachlainn for which they can assign no meaning - never Domhnach Seachnaill' (20 August 1836) in John O'Donovan, Ordnance Survey Letters County Meath, p. 103. 87.42.107.23 (talk) 09:37, 28 March 2012 (UTC)Reply

Changes edit

Just uploaded a few pics which I took this Easter Sunday evening. The GAA pitch and croppy grave isn't looking the best so I'll probably put better ones up when the GAA is finished redevloping the club. Also, Seachnall is the correct modern spelling for the saint. Seachnall becomes Seachnaill only in Irish when it is in the genitive case, e.g. Domhnach Seachnaill, the church of (Saint) Seachnall. In other words, 'Seachnaill Place' should be 'Seachnall Place' and the local national school should always be St Seachnall's, never St Seachnaill's. Captain Fearnought (talk) 20:07, 4 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

Interesting bit of colour edit

The discovery that the fictional character in the Marvel comic strip, shamrock (comics), was born in Dunshaughlin, is a nice bit of colour! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.78.192.218 (talk) 21:32, 23 March 2011 (UTC)Reply