Fernisky: Difference between revisions

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Created page with '{{Infobox town |name=Fernisky |county=Antrim |picture= |picture caption= |os grid ref=J1495 |LG district=Ballymena }} '''Fernisky''' is a village in County Antrim. {{stub}}'
 
RB (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox town
{{Infobox townland
|name=Fernisky
|name=Fernisky
|county=Antrim
|county=Antrim
|picture=
|picture=Fernisky Orange Hall, County Antrim - geograph-2318830.jpg
|picture caption=
|picture caption=Fernisky Orange Hall
|os grid ref=J1495
|os grid ref=J143958
|LG district=Ballymena
|LG district=Mid & East Antrim
}}
}}
'''Fernisky''' is a village in [[County Antrim]].
'''Fernisky''' is a townland in [[County Antrim]], found to the south of [[Balleymena]] in the middle of the county.


{{stub}}
The name of the townland is recorded as ''Ballyfugaske'' (and variants on that form) in a number of early 17th-century sources, but is written as ''Furnisky'' in 1669 and as ''Ferneskey'' in 1780.  The accepted likely etymology is from the Gaelic ''Fearnaisce'', meaning "place of alders".
 
Fernisky is one of nine townlands in the parish of Connor which before the Reformation belonged to nearby [[Kells Abbey]].

Latest revision as of 16:52, 24 September 2016

Fernisky
TOWNLAND
County Antrim

Fernisky Orange Hall
Location
Grid reference: J143958
Data

Fernisky is a townland in County Antrim, found to the south of Balleymena in the middle of the county.

The name of the townland is recorded as Ballyfugaske (and variants on that form) in a number of early 17th-century sources, but is written as Furnisky in 1669 and as Ferneskey in 1780. The accepted likely etymology is from the Gaelic Fearnaisce, meaning "place of alders".

Fernisky is one of nine townlands in the parish of Connor which before the Reformation belonged to nearby Kells Abbey.