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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    Two points re: Irish "crest" tartans:
    (1) they aren't crests, they are the coats of arms of the various counties and as such are the copyright property of the Irish government, the copyright being vested in each local (county) authority. Not that the government does anything to enforce that copyright.
    (2) not all of the arms are correct; certainly the arms of Dublin are not those depicted.
    (3) while the city of Cork has arms, the county does not.
    There are 10 kinds of people in the world: those who understand binary and those who don't.

    Regarding your 2 (or 3?) points:
    1) Are the coats-of-arms of the 6 counties in the North copyright of the Irish government? I knew that the lighthouses in Northern Ireland belonged to the Southern Government, but I didn't know that one. Cool and thanks for the info.
    2) Agree wholeheartedly.
    3) That may be technically true, but the county does use the city's coat of arms, you see it on every county team's crest.

    On the plus side, the vast vast majority of Irish people will call it Derry (like on your site Rocky) rather than Londonderry as on the House of Edgar one. Much easier on the eye, thank you.

  2. #2
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    SMALL HIJACK

    Quote Originally Posted by thanmuwa View Post
    On the plus side, the vast vast majority of Irish people will call it Derry (like on your site Rocky) rather than Londonderry as on the House of Edgar one. Much easier on the eye, thank you.
    I found it very fascinating that when we were in Ireland this past January, STREET SIGNS to Londonderry had the "London" blacked out. This was true for 75% of the signs or more.

    Without trying to be "political", we have followed their lead and list the tartan as Derry. Glad someone caught that and can appreciate it.

    AND NOW, Back to your normally scheduled discussion...

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by RockyR View Post
    SMALL HIJACK



    I found it very fascinating that when we were in Ireland this past January, STREET SIGNS to Londonderry had the "London" blacked out. This was true for 75% of the signs or more.

    Without trying to be "political", we have followed their lead and list the tartan as Derry. Glad someone caught that and can appreciate it.

    AND NOW, Back to your normally scheduled discussion...
    It's a sectarian matter whether to say Derry or Londonderry, but Derry City is right on the border and once seceded from the North. I think that the IRA were hoping that Derry (as the locals call it) could become part of the Republic, but the Republic didn't want to risk starting a war, and eventually it was re-taken by British troops.

    Derry City was really left on the wrong side of the border when Ireland was partitioned, which is a great shame, but it was the county seat of County Londonderry, which was and is mostly Unionist. The irony of this is that the North later abolished counties.

    This leads me on to the question of who owns the copyright to the coats of arms of the six counties of the North. I should think that no-one does, as they no longer exist. The Republic, OTOH, has created three additional counties since partition, which AFAIK were all formerly part of Dublin.

    I hope that this isn't too political, more like merely history. I am descended from people who came from the South coast of Ireland in County Cork, as far from the border as you could get.

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    Heraldic Authority in the Ulster Province

    Quote Originally Posted by O'Callaghan View Post

    This leads me on to the question of who owns the copyright to the coats of arms of the six counties of the North. I should think that no-one does, as they no longer exist. The Republic, OTOH, has created three additional counties since partition, which AFAIK were all formerly part of Dublin.
    All of the county arms in the whole of Ireland were granted by the Office of Arms at Dublin Castle. In 1943 Both governments agreed that the transfer of the Office of Arms would formally take place on 1 April of that year. Furthermore, the office (now under the administration of the Irish Government) would "continue to discharge, under the Irish administration, the functions to which it hitherto carried out in relation to the grant of arms, tracing of genealogies, etc."

    And indeed this is precisely what happened. All of the work then in progress was transferred to the Chief Herald of Ireland who continued the process begun by his predecesor at Dublin Castle, the Ulster King of Arms.

    The first grant to a private individual made by the State was to a Colonel McCaffery in the United States of America. The first grant made to a public body (other than to the Irish Government) was to Ulster Bus in Belfast.

    Thus, as is clear from the terms sited above, the Chief Herald of Ireland has control and authority over the arms of the six counties in the Ulster Province of the United Kingdom. While the administrative jargon of local government has changed in the Ulster Province, the counties have, indeed continued in their existence.

    As far as the new administrative districts recently created in the Republic of Ireland are concerned, all of them have arms granted by the office of the Chief Herald of Ireland. I have no idea why they are termed counties, unless it had something to do with utilizing existing legislation regarding government funding of counties, as opposed to having to create new legislation to fund "cantons", or some other such term.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    All of the county arms in the whole of Ireland were granted by the Office of Arms at Dublin Castle. In 1943 Both governments agreed that the transfer of the Office of Arms would formally take place on 1 April of that year. Furthermore, the office (now under the administration of the Irish Government) would "continue to discharge, under the Irish administration, the functions to which it hitherto carried out in relation to the grant of arms, tracing of genealogies, etc."
    That is interesting, I never knew that.
    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    ....Ulster Province of the United Kingdom. While the administrative jargon of local government has changed in the Ulster Province, the counties have, indeed continued in their existence.
    There is no such thing as an "Ulster Province of the United Kingdom". The province of Ulster refers to 9 counties, only 6 of which are in Northern Ireland and the administrative changes only apply to these 6. To extend the history for those who are not aware, there are 4 provinces of Ireland (Cuigiu in Irish, which means fifths, refering to the fact that Meath and Westmeath used to be a 5th province, imaginatively called Meath), Ulster, Munster, Connacht and Leinster. This is the 4 province flag, one of my favourite flags. Part of Ulster (approx two thirds) became Northern Ireland.

    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    I have no idea why they are termed counties, unless it had something to do with utilizing existing legislation regarding government funding of counties, as opposed to having to create new legislation to fund "cantons", or some other such term.
    Because the government said so, and after all, they decide on these things. "County Dublin" continues in a sporting context, and I think it will be a long time before it enters public consciousness that there is no County Dublin any more...

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by thanmuwa View Post


    There is no such thing as an "Ulster Province of the United Kingdom". The province of Ulster refers to 9 counties, only 6 of which are in Northern Ireland and the administrative changes only apply to these 6. To extend the history for those who are not aware, there are 4 provinces of Ireland (Cuigiu in Irish, which means fifths, refering to the fact that Meath and Westmeath used to be a 5th province, imaginatively called Meath), Ulster, Munster, Connacht and Leinster. This is the 4 province flag, one of my favourite flags. Part of Ulster (approx two thirds) became Northern Ireland.
    You seem to be confusing the post 1600-historical Ulster, which was ultimately divided into nine counties, with the geo-political area created after the treaty of 1921 and which was referred to as "the Ulster Province" and was comprised of six of those nine counties, and remained part of the United Kingdom. The remaining 26 counties formed the new country of Ireland, which although independent of British rule, became part of the Commonwealth.

    The area roughly comprising the modern counties of Meath and Westmeath was, from time to time, considered as a separate kingdom. Generally, however, most folks would consider Ireland to have been comprised of four "kingdoms" or provinces. Interestingly, prior to about 1910 or so the four "provinces" were usually referred to as "kingdoms", the term "province" gaining in popularity after the establishment of the Irish Free State.
    Quote Originally Posted by thanmuwa View Post
    Because the government said so, and after all, they decide on these things. "County Dublin" continues in a sporting context, and I think it will be a long time before it enters public consciousness that there is no County Dublin any more...
    You are technically correct, as the Local Government Act 1991 created the Dublin Regional Authority (a sort of Uber county body) with oversight of three (actually four) administrative districts: Fingal, Dun Laoghaire, Dublin City Corporation, and South County Dublin.

    It was our general opinion at the time that the government chose to call these administrative districts "counties" because there was no other, suitable, administrative term that the Civil Servants in charge of carrying out the provisions of LGA 1991 could use. The LGA 1991 was a fairly complicated bit of legislation, and took until 1993 to enact.
    Last edited by MacMillan of Rathdown; 28th October 08 at 01:32 PM.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    You seem to be confusing the post 1600-historical Ulster, which was ultimately divided into nine counties, with the geo-political area created after the treaty of 1921 and which was referred to as "the Ulster Province" and was comprised of six of those nine counties, and remained part of the United Kingdom. The remaining 26 counties formed the new country of Ireland, which although independent of British rule, became part of the Commonwealth.
    Thanks for the concern, but I am not confused . In fact, as you well know (clear by the fact that you put it into quotation marks) What is colloquially referred to as the "Ulster Province" of the United Kingdom (meaning Northern Ireland) is not used officially and is incorrect (and it is a sectarian term in this context). Ulster correctly refers only to the 9 county region (or geo-politically Northern Ireland plus Donegal, Monaghan and Cavan). The geo-political region you describe is officially called Northern Ireland. But you knew that . See, no confusion at all, especially if you don't use Ulster to refer to Northern Ireland. Donegal for example is as "Ulster" a place as you could possible get, but it is definitely not in Northern Ireland.

    And as to the Commonwealth comment, that is potentially misleading. Ireland is NOT part of the Commonwealth. Ireland became a democratic Republic (like the US) in 1949 meaning that we automatically left the Commonwealth (at the time republics weren't allowed in the Commonwealth). The Irish people have had no desire to rejoin since the rules were changed to allow democracies (the rules were changed to avoid losing India when it became a republic later in 1949. I guess Ireland wasn't a big enough pool of resources to change the rules for )

    Also, parts of Ireland (the Treaty Ports) remained under British rule until 1938 but that is a bit of a nitpick.

    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    The area roughly comprising the modern counties of Meath and Westmeath was, from time to time, considered as a separate kingdom. Generally, however, most folks would consider Ireland to have been comprised of four "kingdoms" or provinces. Interestingly, prior to about 1910 or so the four "provinces" were usually referred to as "kingdoms", the term "province" gaining in popularity after the establishment of the Irish Free State.
    Granted, the Meath province is long outdated, I only mentioned it to explain the apparent inconsistancy of the provinces being called "fifths" in Irish. And also, as a Westmeath man, some of us are proud of the fact that we come from the province that held the seat of the High Kings . I am sceptical that many people would have called the provinces kingdoms, since the majority of the population would have called them cúigiú, which translates as province, not kingdom (translations from Irish tend to go with the closest Latin translation ie "province" rather than the english/germanic "kingdom"). I am however ready to be convinced and would be intrigued to see your references on that.

    All this is of course off-topic (but interesting, at least to me ), and I hope I am succeeding in keeping this all historical and factual and steering clear of politics.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    It was our general opinion at the time that the government chose to call these administrative districts "counties" because there was no other, suitable, administrative term that the Civil Servants in charge of carrying out the provisions of LGA 1991 could use. The LGA 1991 was a fairly complicated bit of legislation, and took until 1993 to enact.
    I am intrigued by this mysterious "our". What group is it you are talking about? I have visions of some secret Dan-Brown-esque group with cowls and the whole works .

    Also, why not call them counties? Drawing up of the original county borders and calling them counties was an artificial process decided by a government, albeit many centuries ago. Surely it is the same process as redrawing county boundaries and renaming counties, just seperated in time (and this time by a democratically elected government)? Why would one be legitimate and not the other?
    It is not as if there is a great big line imprinted in the earth seperating all the counties. The only political boundaries that make much sense to me are ones with a clear geographical division eg Connacht (and Roscommon) from Leinster (and Westmeath) by the Shannon at Athlone. A boundary that is solely a line on a map is a mere whimsy, a product of the imagination of Mankind, to be played with as such .

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    About Point #3...

    Quote Originally Posted by thanmuwa View Post
    There are 10 kinds of people in the world: those who understand binary and those who don't.

    Regarding your 2 (or 3?) points:
    1) Are the coats-of-arms of the 6 counties in the North copyright of the Irish government? I knew that the lighthouses in Northern Ireland belonged to the Southern Government, but I didn't know that one. Cool and thanks for the info.
    2) Agree wholeheartedly.
    3) That may be technically true, but the county does use the city's coat of arms, you see it on every county team's crest.

    On the plus side, the vast vast majority of Irish people will call it Derry (like on your site Rocky) rather than Londonderry as on the House of Edgar one. Much easier on the eye, thank you.
    Er, sorry, but the Cork County Council adopted a seal (in 1899) and that's what it uses. For the record the seal incorporates the arms of the City of Cork surrounded by the arms of the cities of: Youghal; Castlemartyr; Bandon; Midelton; Kinsale; and Charleville.

    As far as "county teams" using the arms of the City of Cork... well, that's sports for you! No one ever said they knew anything about heraldry. UP THE DUBS!!!

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