River Ara

The River Ara (/ˈærə/; Irish: An Ára) is a river in County Tipperary, Ireland.

River Ara
Bridge over the Ara on Station Road, Tipperary (R664)
Native nameAn Ára  (Irish)
Location
CountryIreland
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationShrough, County Tipperary
  elevation136 m (446 ft)
Mouth 
  location
Celtic Sea at Waterford Harbour via Aherlow River and Suir
Length29.4 km (18.3 mi)
Discharge 
  average0.03 m3/s (1.1 cu ft/s)

Name

The Ara (sometimes spelled Arra) takes its name from the ancient territory of Ara (Aradh, Tir Arad, Dál Cairbri Arad) in which it is found, ruled by the Ó Donnagáin (O'Donegans). It gives its name to the barony of Owney and Arra and the Arra Mountains, while Tipperary town (and thus County Tipperary) takes its name from Tiobrad Árann (many spelling variants exist), "the spring by the Ara."[1][2]

Course

The Ara rises in Shrough in the Glen of Aherlow. It flows north, passing under the R662 near Mount Bruis village and meeting a tributary in Shronell. It flows on eastwards, passing through Tipperary where it passes under the Limerick–Rosslare railway line, is bridged by the R664 and separates The Abbey School from the rest of the town. The Ara flows southward past Tipperary Golf Club and then eastward through Bansha Wood.[3] It is bridged by the N24 near Kilshane House and recrosses the Limerick–Rosslare railway line. It continues southeastwards through Bansha and is crosses by Bansha Bridge, a triple-arched limestone bridge (1863).[4] In Ballymorris it drains into the Aherlow River.

Wildlife

As with many tributaries of the River Suir, the Ara is a noted brown trout fishery.[5][6] A restaurant on Abbey Street, Tipperary, just yards from the river, bears the name "The Brown Trout".[7]

gollark: 1999. 1998 was a typo.
gollark: ... a book, obviously?
gollark: Did you think we *didn't* have interuniversal travel?
gollark: Done.
gollark: If you're going to be like *that*, I'll transport you to a universe identical to your current one except that Vernor Vinge's *A Deepness in the Sky* was published in 1999 and not 1996.

See also

References

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