Shane Bernagh

Shane Bernagh Donnelly was a rapparee local to the Cappagh and Altmore area of County Tyrone during the 17th century who would use the mountains as a vantage point to launch daring hold ups on carriages passing through the area on the main Dublin to Derry road nearby.[1]

Local legend has it that the highwayman assisted impoverished locals with his robberies, mainly from English gentry and English soldiers. A barracks was built in the Altmore area in an attempt to curb his activities but to little avail. Because of this Bernagh has over time become a local legend in the mould of Robin Hood who robbed from the rich and gave to the poor. He was eventually captured and executed by the English. His body was cast into a lough at the summit of Slieve Beagh, which straddles the counties of Tyrone, Fermanagh and Monaghan. He was immortalised further by the local scholar Dr. George Sigerson in his popular ballad "The Mountains of Pomeroy" and by local Irish poet John Montague in his poem "A Lost Tradition". There is a small rocky area on the outskirts of Cappagh and Altmore called Shane Bernagh's Chair, called so as it is shaped like a chair. It received its fame from the highwayman, who used the rugged mountain area to hide out and launch his next attack on his unsuspecting victims. The nearby Bernish Glen is named after Donnelly as local oral legend notes that he once jumped across the glen on horse back as he sought to evade the oncoming English troops.

The heathery gap where the Rapparee, Shane Bernagh, saw his brother die. On a summer's day the dying sun stained its colours to crimson. So breaks the heart, Brish mó Cree.

A verse from Montague's "A Lost Tradition".

Notes

  1. McCallen, Jim (1993). Stand and Deliver. Stories of Irish Highwaymen. Ireland Mercier Press. ISBN 1-85635-036-3.
gollark: If DC gets popular enough, and/or people just continue playing, eventually all good names will be gone and we'll have to either have stupidly long ones, unpronounceable strings of letters, or meaningless sequences of words.
gollark: Hellohi!
gollark: You can use Ikea product names if you want a good source of vaguely human-sounding ones.
gollark: I go around considering the ethics of DC for immersion, mostly, but whatever.
gollark: Especially if you use the actual Kill action.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.