The history of Galway is too long to set out here in any detail, and
for those interested can be read up in a number of books, some of which
are listed in our books section. Here is an outline of Galway's history
in point form, designed to give you an overview of several thousand
years.
|
- It is generally agreed that the town was named after the river,
which was known until recently as the Galway River rather than the
Corrib.
- The Irish name for river is 'Gaillimh', but the precise meaning of
this is disputed. One version has it that Gaillimh was the name of
the daughter of an Iron-age chieftain who was drowned in the river.
- Recent finds of stone implements suggest that there has been human
habitation at the site since neolithic (New Stone Age) times.
- A dun (or fort) was built at some time, and there was probably a
settlement of fishermen at what is known as The
Claddagh from early times.
- The Vikings visited the area in 927A.D. and ravaged the local
monasteries, but, curiously, failed to found a town as they did in
other places. This is odd, given that the river and lake gave access
by water well into Connaucht.
- The O'Connors built a dun with wooden fortifications near the
mouth of the river in 1124.
- In 1132 O'Brien (King of Munster) sent a force which destroyed it.
This kind of warfare between the clans was a feature of Irish life
since early times.
- It is recorded that in 1154 ships sailed from beside the dun,
which had been rebuilt. This establishes Galway as a port for the
first time.
- The Anglo-Normans under Richard de Burgo invaded Connacht and
captured the dun in 1235 from the O'Flahertys, and established a
castle there. Despite frequent attacks by the dispossessed
O'Flahertys, De Burgo held firm.
- 1270: Richard de Burgo started to build the wall, turning Galway
into a walled town protected by a castle. Eventually approximately
25 acres were enclosed.
- 1312: extra walls were constructed as Galway town became
progressively more isolated from the Anglo-Norman settlements due to
the revival of native Irish power.
- 1320: the church of St. Nicholas of Myra was erected as parish
church for the town. (The franciscans had a friary outside the town
since 1296.)
- A series of charters were granted to Galway on petition by Richard
II (1361-1400) and Henry IV (1367-1413). The walls were extended and
improved, and coins were minted.
- By 1450 the well-known town houses began to appear, as the famous
14
Families (incorrectly known as the '14 Tribes'), began to
establish themselves at the top of civic life. Later,a charter from
Richard III (1452-1485) emancipated Galway from the control of the
descendants of the de Burgos, who had more or less gone native. This
charter allowed the election of a mayor and two bailiffs. This
effectively gave Galway considerable self-government.
- The towns's church, St.Nicholas of Myra, was governed by the
diocese of Tuam. The city notables disliked this, and contrived to
have the Pope Innocent VIII (reign 1484-1492) issue a Bull (Papal
declaration) that the church in Galway would be free of diocesian
control and instead would be ruled by a Warden assisted by eight
vicars. The Warden was to be elected by the 14 families, and
continued under the reformed church until 1840. Thus by 1484 Galway
had both civil and ecclesiastical independence, and its remote
location guaranteed it the status of a city state.
- Most medieval cities, whose buildings were constructed of wood and
thatch, had a Great Fire. Galway had two, in 1473 and 1500, and as a
result the city was rebuilt in stone.
- For the next hundred years Galway traded extensively with the
continent, especially Spain, exporting local produce such as fish,
wool and leather, and importing fruit, oil and most importantly
wine. Under the rule of a series of Mayors drawn from the 14
families, the city became extremely wealthy and prospered, as a city
hospital (St. Brigid's) was built, and Elizabeth I (1533-1603)
granted a charter for a town gaol in 1578, and a garrison was set to
defend the town.
- 1588: The year of the Spanish Armada. Two hundred Spaniards who
came ashore after a shipwreck in Galway Bay were butchered by order
of the Lord Deputy.
- 1599: Red Hugh O'Donnell, engaged in a lengthy war with the Queen,
passed by and burned a convent, but Galway itself was unharmed. By
1602 the town was fully fortified, and a patent for a fair was
granted in 1613.
- The famous Free School ad been established in 1580, and had
prospered to such a degree (despite being temporarily suppressed by
James I (1566-1625)) that the enrollment is said to have reached
10,000, and the numbers of scholars attending became a nuisance to
the town, so that in 1627 it was ordered that all foreigners and
beggars were to be whipped out of the town. Sadly, this great
educational establishment closed in 1652 as part of the general
post-Cromwellian decline.
- The success of Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658) in his struggle with
the King was bad news for Galway. In 1651 Sir Charles Coote invested
the town by land and sea, and in 1652 starvation forced a surrender
on apparently favourable terms which were not adhered to. All
Catholics were expelled from the town, and the great town houses of
the 14 families were confiscated and given to soldiers of the
occupying forces in lieu of pay. They quickly fell into ruin as the
prosperity of the town declined.
- After the Restoration, Galway looked to recover its former
position of wealth, but the War of William and James brought this
recovery to an end. Under the Penal Laws, which at first were
rigorously enforced, Catholics suffered severe disabilities in
relation to education, ownership of property and civil rights. After
about 1750 religious tolerance returned as the inhabitants returned
to their primary concern of making money through trade and industry,
which had been Galway's great preoccupation since the Middle Ages.
This time the new growth in prosperity was water-based, as the
river's force was harnessed to power a number of mills, breweries
and distilleries. At the same time most of the inhabitants lived in
squalor and filth.
- This short-lived period of recovery lasted until the Great Famine
1846 - 1848. There have been several famines in Irish history, but
this famine was nationwide and exceeded them all in severity and
duration. The pre-famine population of Ireland is estimated to have
been in the region of 8 million. By 1850 this number was reduced to
less than 6 million, and this decline continued throughout the rest
of the century as people emigrated in droves principally to England,
Scotland, North America, Australia and New Zealand. During the
famine years, great numbers of poor people flocked to Galway port to
travel to the United States. There were however some signs of better
times. Queen's College Galway opened in 1849, and the first railway
connection to Galway opened in 1851. However the town remained in
general decline, and the population reached an all-time low of 13000
in 1911.
- In the 20th century Galway staged a slow recovery; Salthill, once
a distant and small resort became a suburb as the town began to
spread and economic recovery speeded up, greatly helped by the
presence of tourists in summer and college students in winter. One
casualty of progress was the old Claddagh Village. The Claddagh, a
tightly-knit fishing community that kept itself aloof from the rest
of the town had survived all the ups and downs of history with its
own culture and customs largely intact, a maze of small thatched
cabins clustered behind the Dominican church. In 1934 Galway
Corporation took an interest on grounds of health and hygiene; the
little houses were demolished, the streets were tarred (in place of
the traditional cobbles) and local-authority houses were built to
house the inhabitants. At a stroke, hundreds of years of local
history and autonomy were wiped out of existence. Today the Claddagh
is just another suburb , an uninteresting cluster of streets, and no
trace of its colorful history remain.
- Galway Today: Today Galway is reputed to be the fastest
growing city in Europe. Prosperity has returned with a vengeance.
During the summer months traffic congestion is virtually unbearable
in the city; there is a week-long festival race-meeting at the end
of July that attracts thousands to the suburb of Ballybrit, where
vast sums are wagered over six days racing. A variety of other festivals
keep the city busy all through the summer, as Galway has gone back
to its historic pre-occupation with trade, commerce and the making
of money.
The 14 Families:: All were originally
Anglo-Norman who came to positions of authority after c.1450. The most prominent
family was Lynch, who provided 84 mayors to the city, and whose town house still
stands in Shop Street. Sadly, it was 'renovated' in the sixties by its present
owners, the Allied Irish Bank, whose principal interest was in efficient and
profitable banking rather than conservation, and so only the shell of the
building is intact. These town houses were known as 'castles', and the bank is
still known as Lynch's Castle. The other families were (in alphabetical order):
Athy, Blake, Bodkin, Browne, D'arcy, Deane, Ffont, Ffrench, Joyce, Martin,
Morris and Skerrett. Many of these names came to prominence later in the history
of the county.
The Claddagh: 'Cladach' means a stony
foreshore, and a settlement of fishermen seems to have existed here since the
earliest times. The city walls never enclosed the Claddagh, which retained its
own customs, a large degree of self-government and its own 'King'.
|