J - K
Joly
Rare outside
Dublin and scattered in location, this name is very well known, particularly
to readers in the National Library where the Joly Gift forms one of the
most important collections there. It was formerly the property of the
Royal Dublin Society but was transferred to the National Library when
it was established in 1877. The donor was Jaspar Robert Joly (1819-1892)
who was born in Co. Offaly and as well as being a lawyer and a scholar
was the owner of considerable estates in counties Offaly, Clare and Meath.
Another notable man of the name was Charles Jasper July (1804-1901), the
astronomer. Julys and Jolleys settled in Ireland at various times. The
first was Henry Jolly, who was master-gunner in 1595. In the next century
a Quaker living at Clonmel in 1680 is met; and the Jolly monument in Fethard
(Co. Tipperary) Protestant churchyard recalls the romantic story of the
English trooper Robert Jolly and Ellen Meagher which has often been told.
His wife Ellen, who had first married a rich Jew, is described as a "faithful
Catholic" in the will of the parish priest of Clonmel in 1711. Jully appeared
twice among the tituladoes in the barony of Burren, Co. Clare, in 1659,
but this may not be a synonym of Jolly. The derivation of the English
name is from the French 'joli'.
Kelly
There are approximately
50,000 Kellys and O'Kellys in Ireland today. It is the second commonest
Irish surname, not far behind Murphy in numerical strength. This name
presents a remarkable example of the extent to which the prefixes O and
Mac, so widely dropped during the period of Gaelic submergence, have been
resumed. In the year 1890 there were 1,242 births registers as Kelly (distributed
all over the country), while only nine were registered as O'Kelly. Today
the proportion has risen from one in 130 to approximately one in twenty.
President of Ireland, Mr. Sean T. O'Kelly, was a case in point. There
is a fairly widespread but quite erroneous belief that all persons of
the name descend from members of the great O'Kelly sept of Ui Maine. The
fact is that this surname came into being independently in at least seven
widely separated places. Up to the thirteenth century the O'Kellys of
Breagh (Co. Meath) were equal in importance to those of Ui Maine, but
the impact of the Anglo-Norman invasion dispersed them. The Kellys of
Ulster to-day are, no doubt, mostly of the O'Kelly of Cinel Eachrach sept
(Counties Antrim and Derry); those of the midlands come probably from
the O'Kellys, one of the seven septs of Leix who were still strong in
their homeland in 1543, when they were specifically mentioned in an order
relating to martial law in queen's County; the atrocious murder of Fergus
O'Kelly of Leix by the Earl of Kildare later in the same century, and
the subsequent transfer of O'Kelly estates to the Fitzgeralds makes a
black page in the history of the latter family; north Connacht Kellys
are more likely to be of the Templeboy (Co. Sligo) sept than of that of
Ui Maine; while Dublin Kellys can either be from a north Wicklow family
of the name, or migrants from any of the above septs. In each case the
eponymous ancestor was called Ceallach, a personal name, from the genitive
case of which we get O Ceallaigh, the Irish form of the surname. The Kellys
of Kilkenny and Tipperary, however, are O Caollaidhe, not O Ceallaigh,
some of whom retain the older form Kealy, which is Queally in Co. Waterford.
Queally is also found as a synonym of O Cadhla, usually O'Kelly in English.
Most Rev. Malachy Queally, who was among the most distinguished of the
Archbishops of Tuam (1630-1645), was born in the diocese of Killaloe which
includes a great part of Tipperary. O'Kelly of Ui Maine was, and is, outstanding
among all these. There is an authentic pedigree of their chiefs from the
earliest times until the present day, and O'Kelly of Gallagh is one of
the few whose claim to the designation Chief of the Name is officially
recognized: in popular parlance he is The O'Kelly. The arms illustrated
in plate XVII are those of O'Kelly of Ui Maine and, it should be understood,
do not appertain to O'Kellys of other septs. Ui Maine, often called Hy
Many, covers east Co. Galway and the southern part of Co. Roscommon. The
Four Masters and the other Annals are full of their exploits and obituaries.
Four of them have been Bishops of Clonfert, which is the diocese comprising
much of the O'Kelly country. In 1518 the O'Kellys were one of the dangerous
Irish septs named by the Corporation of Galway. In the next century the
O'Kellys of Co. Galway were very prominent, as indeed were those of the
Pale, too, for no less than ten of the name in Counties Dublin, Kildare
and Meath were attainted in 1642. The most famous was Col. Charles O'Reilly
(1621-1695), who first appears in the 1641 war, as a commander under Sarsfield
in 1690, and represented Co. Roscommon in the Parliament of 1689; he is
best known, however, as the author of the very valuable contemporary history
Excidium Macariae. It is of interest to note that the estate of this leading
Catholic family was secured to them under the Treaty of Limerick. Twenty-five
O'Kelly proprietors, nearly all of them of the Hy Many sept, were attainted
in 1691. In modern times they have been less prominent. Dennis O'Kelly
(1720-1787) had a remarkable career: emigrating from Ireland he started
as a billiard-marker in London, was part owner of the famous Derby winner
"Eclipse", and became a colonel. Patrick O'Kelly (1754-1835) was a well-known
character - poet and eccentric. James O'Kelly (1845-1916), had a varied
and adventurous career as war correspondent in three continents and Parnellite
M.P. Seamus O'Kelly (1881-1918), playwright, was another man of note hailing
from east Galway. Many O'Kellys have distinguished themselves in America.
Eugene Kelly (1808-1894), banker and philanthropist, a strong Irish nationalist
and Catholic, and John Kelly, the missionary, were of the Derry-Tyrone
sept. William Kely (1811-1888), the inventor, and, in a very different
sphere, Michael Kelly (1857-1894), the idol of baseball fans, and also
Co. Patrick Kelly, commander of the Irish Brigade at Gettysburg, may be
mentioned. In France Father Malachy Kelly (d. 1684) was the founder of
the Irish College, Paris. One branch of the Hy Many sept settled at Guyenne
and was ranked among the nobility of France. It should be added that some
Kellys are MacKelly, not O'Kelly. This was a minor sept also of east Connacht,
but the Mac prefix is now entirely lost and any surviving modern representatives
are thus indistinguishable from O'Kellys. Daniel MacKelly, Archbishop
of Cashel from 1238-1253, was the first Dominican to become an Irish bishop.
The well-known Kelly family fo the Isle of Man is also MacKelly. From
information on O'Kelly pedigrees see O'Donovan, The Tribes and Customs
of Hy Many.
Kinahan
When Kinahan
and Kinaghan are found in Ulster or Louth they are usually variants of
the Cunningham, which has been widely used in Ireland as the anglicized
form of Ó Cuinneagáin and Ó Cuinneacháin. For example George Henry Kinahan
(1820-1908), geologist and engineer, was from Co. Down. Kinahan, as a
distinct name belongs to the country south of Athlone, comprising the
neighbouring parts of counties Offaly, Westmeath and Galway; and there
it is mainly found today. Pedigrees of the Offaly families are among the
records of the Genealogical Office.
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