Electoral ward and townland
Monkstown (Irish : Baile na Manach )[ 1] is a townland [ 2] (of 811 acres)[ 3] and electoral ward in County Antrim , Northern Ireland . It is within the urban area of Newtownabbey and the Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council area. The townland was previously called Ballynamanagh (from Irish Baile na Manach 'townland of the monks')[ 2] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] It is also situated in the civil parish of Carnmoney and the historic barony of Belfast Lower .[ 3]
Monkstown is said to be the burial place of Fergus Mor Mac Eirc, king of Dal Riata.[ 7] which suggests a religious house was established in the 5th century CE. It possibly became a grange- a farm that was managed by a monastery, and was possibly associated with the monastery at Woodburn in Carrickfergus.[ 8]
Railways
Monkstown railway station is currently closed on the Belfast-Derry railway line run by Northern Ireland Railways .
Education
Schools and colleges which serve the area include Abbey Community College , Hollybank Primary School and University of Ulster .[citation needed ]
Sport
The local association football clubs, 18th Newtownabbey Old Boys F.C. and Nortel F.C. , play in the Northern Amateur Football League .[citation needed ]
Notable people
References
^ "Baile na Manach/Monkstown" . logainm.ie . Retrieved 10 December 2023 .
^ a b Placenames Database of Ireland
^ a b "Monkstown" . IreAtlas Townlands Database . Retrieved 12 April 2015 .
^ Reeves, William (September 2009). Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Down, Connor, and Dromore, Consisting of a taxation of these Dioceses . BiblioBazaar, LLC. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-113-69516-1 . Retrieved 4 February 2010 .
^ Hill, George (1873). An historical account of the Macdonnells of Antrim : Including Notices Of Some Other Septs, Irish And Scottish . Kessinger Publishing. p. 453 . ISBN 1-4326-4080-1 . Retrieved 4 February 2010 . Ballynamanagh.
^ St. J. Clarke, The Rev. H. J. (1938). Thirty Centuries in South East Antrim. The Parish of Coole or Carnmoney . p. 128. Retrieved 4 February 2010 .
^ Hill, George. An historical account of the Macdonnells of Antrim : Including Notices Of Some Other Septs, Irish And Scottish . Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 1-4326-4080-1 . Retrieved 24 July 2019 .
^ McCann, Edmund; Reeves, William; McCana, Edmund (1854). "Irish Itinerary of Father Edmund MacCana". Ulster Journal of Archaeology . 2 : 44–59. JSTOR 20608707 .