Golden Vale

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The Golden Vale ({{Irish place name|Machaire méith na Mumhan}})

{{cite journal |last=Ó Giolláin |first=Diarmuid |date=June 2005 |title=The national and the local — practices of de- and retraditionalization |journal=FF Network |publisher=The Folklore Fellows |issue=28 |page=17,fn.5 |issn=0789-0249 |url=http://www.folklorefellows.fi/netw/ffn28/FFN28.pdf |accessdate=2009-03-08 |quote="Machaire méith na Mumhan", usually referred to as the Golden Vale, the richest dairy land in Ireland |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090318174956/http://www.folklorefellows.fi/netw/ffn28/FFN28.pdf |archivedate=2009-03-18 }}

is the historic name given to an area of rolling pastureland in the province of Munster in southwestern Ireland. The area covers parts of three counties: Cork, Limerick and Tipperary. Considered the best land in Ireland for dairy farming, the region has been described as the "heart of the Munster dairying country".

{{cite journal |last=Freeman |first=T. W. |date=July–September 1947 |title=Farming in Irish Life |journal=The Geographical Journal |publisher=Blackwell Publishing on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society |volume=110 |issue=1/3 |pages=48,fn.1 |quote=The Golden Vein (sometimes called the Golden Vale) consists of the lowlands of Co. Limerick with an extension towards Tipperary and Cashel and a southward extension to the neighbourhood of Charleville and Mallow. In effect it is the heart of the Munster dairying country. |doi=10.2307/1789193|jstor=1789193 }}

Geography

The Golden Vale is bordered in the east by the Galtee Mountains, with the Glen of Aherlow as a picturesque abutting valley. The Munster Blackwater valley is the Vale's southern part. Towns in the Golden Vale include Charleville, Mitchelstown, Kilmallock and Tipperary.

Naming

Historically it has been called the Golden Vein. An early instance is an 1837 book by Jonathan Binns, a British government official, where he refers to the area as '"the golden vale" (more correctly the "golden vein")'{{cite book |last=Binns |first=Jonathan |title=Miseries and beauties of Ireland |publisher=Longman, Orme, Brown and co |date=1837 |volume=2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6042AAAAMAAJ |access-date=25 September 2021 |archive-date=28 June 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190628155416/https://books.google.com/books?id=6042AAAAMAAJ |url-status=live }} |page=101 and states "The land is of excellent quality, being part of the golden vein of Ireland—a district reaching from Tipperary towards Limerick. The extent of the golden vein is about fourteen miles long, by six or seven wide." (i.e. 23 × 10 km; an area of 58,000 acres or 236 km2)Binns, p.161 Some subsequent writers similarly prefer "vein".

{{cite book |last=Unstead |first=John Frederick |title=The British Isles |publisher=London University Press |date=1960 |series=A systematic regional Geography |volume=1 |page=261 |quote=the relatively broad hollow called the Vale of Limerick, and sometimes known as the "Golden Vale" or, more correctly, the "Golden Vein". |oclc=255935608}}

{{cite news |title=Hardships of service in days of the 'Spailpín' |last=Meagher |first=Jim |date=28 February 1987 |work=Southern Star |page=10 |quote=North Cork, County Limerick and West Tipperary areas, in other words, the rich and fertile land of the "Golden Vein" (now incorrectly termed "Golden Vale" — there is no vale). }}

In 1739, Walter Harris suggested the "Golden" name was a corruption of Gowlin,{{cite book |editor-first=Walter |editor-last=Harris |last1=Ware |first1=Sir James |title=History of the Bishops of the Kingdom of Ireland |series=The Whole Works of Sir James Ware Concerning Ireland |volume=I |date=1739 |page=20, fn.† |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=12dUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA20 |publisher=E. Jones |location=Dublin |accessdate=2 March 2019 |language=en |archive-date=25 September 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210925142402/https://books.google.com/books?id=12dUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA20 |url-status=live }} former name of a village now called Golden, from {{langx|ga|An Gabhailín}} "little fork [in the River Suir]".{{cite book |last1=Mills |first1=A. D. |title=A Dictionary of British Place-Names |date=2003 |publisher=OUP |location=Oxford |isbn=9780191578472 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=br8xcW1f_a8C&pg=PT567 |accessdate=2 March 2019 |language=en |archive-date=25 September 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210925142405/https://books.google.com/books?id=br8xcW1f_a8C&pg=PT567 |url-status=live }}

Sources

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Further reading

  • [https://books.google.com/books?id=2MlVAQAACAAJ&dq=%22The+Golden+Vale+of+Ivowen%22 The golden vale of Ivowen: between Slievenamon and Suir] Eoghan Ó Néill 2001 {{ISBN|978-0-906602-91-1}}
  • [https://books.google.com/books?id=vDagAAAAMAAJ&q=%22The+Book+of+the+Galtees+and+the+Golden+Vein%22&dq=%22The+Book+of+the+Galtees+and+the+Golden+Vein%22 The book of the Galtees and the Golden Vein: a border history of Tipperary, Limerick & Cork] Paul J. Flynn, 1926

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Category:Valleys of the Republic of Ireland

Category:Landforms of County Cork

Category:Landforms of County Tipperary

Category:Landforms of County Limerick