- Ard na
Caithne (Irish pronunciation: [ˈaːɾˠd̪ˠ n̪ˠə ˈkahnʲə];
meaning "height of the arbutus/strawberry tree"),
sometimes known in
English as Smerwick...
- is
named after the Norman-Irish Feiritéar
family who
settled in Ard na
Caithne in the late
medieval period. The last
Chief of the Name was the seventeenth-century...
-
strawberry tree", or cain, or cane
apple (from the
Irish name for the tree,
caithne), or
sometimes "Killarney
strawberry tree". The
strawberry tree is the...
-
family at
their burial place. The
oratory overlooks the
harbour at Ard na
Caithne (formerly also
called Smerwick) on the
Dingle Peninsula.
Saints road (Cosán...
- The
siege of
Smerwick took
place at Ard na
Caithne (the Hill of the
Arbutus Tree,
known in
English as Smerwick) in
November 1580,
during the
Second Desmond...
- of the
peninsula near the
village of
Baile an Fheirtéaraigh in Ard na
Caithne. Músaem
Chorca D****bhne,
situated in the
village of
Baile an Fheirtéaraigh...
- Fyfe and Kinross,
Forfar (i.e. Angus), Bamf (i.e. Banff), Sutherland,
Caithnes,
Elgine (i.e. Moray),
Orkney and Zetland, Clakmannan. "Act of the convention...
-
Sixteenth century, the
Siege of Smerwick, took
place at Dún an Óir near Ard na
Caithne (Smerwick) at the tip of the
Dingle Peninsula. The 600-strong Italian,...
- Ireland. The name is
derived from the
village of
Smerwick (Irish: Ard na
Caithne)
where the
strata are
exposed in
coastal sections on
either side of Smerwick...
- [citation needed] The
fruit of the
strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo),
known as
caithne in Irish, is ****ociated with
religious establishments and may have been...