School: Coone, Leighlinbridge (roll number 5713)

Location:
Coan, Co. Kilkenny
Teacher:
Éamonn de Paor
Browse
The Schools’ Collection, Volume 0865, Page 347

Archival Reference

The Schools’ Collection, Volume 0865, Page 347

Image and data © National Folklore Collection, UCD.

See copyright details.

Download

Open data

Available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

  1. XML School: Coone, Leighlinbridge
  2. XML Page 347
  3. XML “Tithe War”
  4. XML “The Ringing of Muckalee Bell”

Note: We will soon deprecate our XML Application Programming Interface and a new, comprehensive JSON API will be made available. Keep an eye on our website for further details.

On this page

  1. (continued from previous page)
    window, on to the street.
    This turn of events knocked all the courage out of the Protestants, who did not offer any resistance afterwards. The blood of the peasants was up, and they stood all day in the Square, shouting defiance at the Protestants, and daring them to come out and fight. The challenge was not accepted, and the disgusted Coone men marched home in the evening, disappointed, but victors at least in a moral sense. The system of tithes was unostentatiously dropped after this affray, as it was feared that if the ire of the Cooners was again roused that they would create more disturbance.
    Transcribed by a member of our volunteer transcription project.
  2. It is the common belief in this neighbourhood that it is terribly unlucky to ring a chapel bell without reason. About 60 or 70 years ago there men in Muckalee were coming home from a dance. Their road lay by the chapel, and talk turned on the superstition about the bell. One of them said he would ring the bell if the others did likewise. They agreed, and going in to the yard, each rang the bell. The immediately hurried home, arranging to meet on the next day. The following morning one of them got a paralytic stroke, another could not move his head on his shoulders, while the third could not move his legs. They remained deformed to the end of their days. (One of them was a man named Meaney).
    Transcribed by a member of our volunteer transcription project.
    Topics
    1. agents (~1)
      1. supernatural and legendary beings (~14,864)
    Language
    English
    Collector
    Eamonn de Paor
    Gender
    Male
    Occupation
    Teacher
    Informant
    Paul Kinsella
    Gender
    Male
    Address
    Coan, Co. Kilkenny