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Written by John McCullagh
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Tuesday, 17 October 2006 |
Most
of our place names derive from the original Gaelic and so it is of Annalong – Ath na Long or the ford of the
ships. We must remember that before
every river and stream ...

.... was crossed with man-made bridges,
the word ford referred to a shallow
crossing place of the water. The name
probably goes back to at least Viking times when the invaders’ long ships found
some shelter here at the mouth of the river.
Early documentary evidence of the
name is sparse. We are not aware of it
on any document before Symington’s Survey of 1655 – though the fact that it is
not a townland may contribute to that. In the Census Report of 1659 Annalong is referred to as a Quarter – a
sub-division of a townland – in its case, of Moneydarraghmore. Neighbouring townlands are Mullartown ( .. of
the bare or rounded summit); Moneydarraghmore ( .. of the great dark thicket or
scrub); Glasdrumman ( .. of the green ridge), and Ballyveagh (.. possibly
McVeigh’s townland).
There is little evidence of the
Vikings ever settling here. There
remains however in local dialect, a few words suggestive of Norse
influence. Selk is the local name for
the common seal: to ‘set allow’ is to
set aflame; to ‘hain’ is to eke
out; ‘holm’ refers to low-lying land
close to the river. Until recently fish
were normally sold by count, and the ‘long [Norse] hundred’ was used. It was equivalent to six score (120). To be more precise, the traditional method
meant that there were 127 fish in the ‘hundred’.
The Vikings were also said to have
introduced the clinker-built boat with the lower edge of each plank overlapping
the one below, like the slates on a roof. This construction method was favoured until recent times by local
fishermen and is still occasionally used.
……. More ……….
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