BROWSE
townland
Baile Threaint
genitive: Bhaile Threaint
(Irish)
Ballytrent
(English)

Glossary

English townland, town, homestead

Hierarchy

county

barony

civil parish

Explanatory note

  • English

    (the) town(land) of —?

    The evidence for this place-name is compatible with derivation from ‘Baile Traint’ as suggested by O’Donovan (19) (see also BPP p.33). However, earlier historical examples in -trent suggest a palatal tr- as in Baile Threaint.

    The specific element appears to have been monosyllabic, and the anglicised forms contain no reflex of the article an or na, as is usual in anglicised Irish place-names in Forth and Bargy (see BALLYBOHER (#54494), par. Ishartmon; cf. BALLYTRA (#54187), par. Carn). The consistent spelling of the ending in -nt would indicate that this element was a borrowing into Irish: the consonant cluster -nt had disappeared in the prehistory of Irish (cf. Welsh cant versus Ir. céad “hundred”), and although it re-emerged in the sixth century it occurred only internally, due to syncope in multisyllabic words (see McCone, 1996 pp.74–5, 127–30). This suggests that the final element here is derived from a foreign name similar to O’Donovan’s ‘Trant’ (19), an English surname which is recorded by Cottle (1978, p.387). Woulfe (SGG p.280) states further that the name de Treant means ‘of Trent, a parish in Somerset, also a place in Dorset’ and mentions the family of that name based in An Daingean, Co. Kerry. If the final element here is identical, Ballytrent would be one of the very few Irish names in South Wexford to contain a borrowing from the Anglo-Normans (see BALLYSAMPSON (#54182), par. Ballymore).

    MacLysaght (MIF p.233) gives an alternative tradition that the Trants of Kerry were Ostmen (Danes) who arrived in one of the pre-Norman Shannon settlements. However, it should be noted that in fourteenth-century documents the surname occurs in Kerry as (le) Trewent and Trawent (see CJI Edw.I ii pp.411, 610; see also CJI Edw.I i, p.564), spellings which look not only distinctly un-Norse in form, but remarkably similar to the Pembrokeshire place-name Trewent. This evidence suffices to raise serious doubts about MacLysaght’s suggestion that Trant predated the Anglo-Normans in Ireland, and as a result one must be circumspect about any theory that the eponym of the present place-name Ballytrent was of Hiberno-Norse origin. Indeed, it is possible that the -u- in ‘Ballytrounte’ (1) is a reflex of the -w- in the surname Trewent/Trawent as found in the Kerry examples just mentioned.

    The Irish form of Caheratrant (#22795) in the Kerry Gaeltacht of Corca Dhuibhne is Cathair an Treantaigh “the circular stone fort, dwelling place of An Treantach (Trent)”, which contains the substantive adjectival form of the surname discussed by Woulfe (see SGG p.280). However, as the sizeable evidence for Ballytrent shows no unambiguous reflex of final -aigh, it is felt appropriate to adhere to a form similar to O’Donovan’s suggested ‘Baile Traint’ (19), Baile Threaint.
    [Excerpt from Logainmneacha na hÉireann IV: Townland Names of County Wexford, 2016]

Centrepoint

52.2198, -6.34158latitude, longitude
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Irish Grid (without letter)
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Archival records

scanned image

Historical references

1324
Ballytrounte
Kn. Fees Leathanach: 123
1339
Ballytrent
Forth Bar. Leathanach: 69
1420
Ballitrente (John Synnot, Chronicles of Tintern)
Hore Imleabhar: II, Leathanach: 64
1538
Ballitrente (Steph. Synnot)
Forth Bar. Leathanach: 76
1540–1
Ballytronte
Crown Surv. Leathanach: 18
1543
Balitrante (Stephen Synott; Chronicles of Tintern)
Hore Imleabhar: II, Leathanach: 86
1545
Ballytrott (Steph. Synnot)
Forth Bar. Leathanach: 76
1551
Balletrott (Steph. Synnot)
Forth Bar. Leathanach: 80
1553
Ballytronte
Forth Bar. Leathanach: 81
1571
Ballitronte (Pat. Sinot)
Forth Bar. Leathanach: 84
1571
Ballytronte
Forth Bar. Leathanach: 84
1577
Ballytront
Forth Bar. Leathanach: 89
1617
Ballitrout
Inq. Lag.
1617
Ballytrout (Pat. Synott)
Inq. Lag. Alt: 17 J I
1617
Mulyman
Inq. Lag. Alt: 17 J I
1623
Ballitrant
Inq. Lag. Leathanach: 40 J I
1623
Ballitrant (Tho’ Roche)
Inq. Lag.
1632
(Thos. Murrough)
Inq. Lag. Alt: 64 C I
1632
Ballytrout (Pat. Synnott)
Inq. Lag. Alt: 64 C I
1640
Ballytraunt (John Barry)
Inq. Lag. Alt: 145 C I
1641c
Ballytrent (Pat. Synnott)
Wexford Rebel List 1641 Leathanach: 43
1654-6
Ballytrent
CS (LG) Leathanach: 306
1659
Ballytrent
Cen. Leathanach: 536
1659
Ballytrent
Cen. Leathanach: 536
1660
Ballytrent (Pat. Sinnott)
BSD (LG) Imleabhar: (CS), Leathanach: 90 (306)
1667
Ballitrent (Rich. Nunn)
ASE Leathanach: 82
1667
Ballytreule (Thom. Holme)
ASE Leathanach: 110
1668
Ballytrent (Abr. Deane)
ASE Leathanach: 174
1680C
Ballitrent
A Chap. ded. to St. Nicholas at Ballyconnor at Ballitrent
Descr. Forth Leathanach: 69
1685c
Ballitrent
Hib. Del.
1690c
Ballytrent
Quit Rent (LG) Leathanach: 25
1690c
Ballytrent (Ab. Deane)
Quit Rent (LG) Leathanach: 28
1713
Ballytrent
CGn. Imleabhar: 26, Leathanach: 137, Uimhir: 14884
1725
Ballytrent
Loftus Papers Leathanach: 41
1734
Ballytrant (Millward-Hughes)
CGn. Imleabhar: 80, Leathanach: 355, Uimhir: 56150
1816
Ballytrent
Gill (Wexford)
1830c
Ballytrent
TAB Leathanach: 5
1840
Baile Traint, 'Trant's town'
OD:AL Imleabhar: 1, Leathanach (AL): 19
1840
Ballytrant
DS Map:AL Imleabhar: 1, Leathanach: 19
1840
Ballytrent
Barry, R.:AL (LG) Cill Ruáin
1840
Ballytrent
BS:AL Imleabhar: I, Leathanach: 19
1840
Ballytrent
CM:AL Imleabhar: 1, Leathanach: 19
1840
Ballytrent
Elrington, C. R., Rev.:AL (LG)
1840
Ballytrent
Freeholders:AL (LG) Imleabhar: 1, Leathanach: 19
1840
Ballytrent
Gill Map:AL (LG) Imleabhar: 1, Leathanach: 19
1840
Ballytrent
GJP:AL Imleabhar: 1, Leathanach: 19
1840
Ballytrent
OD:AL Imleabhar: 1, Leathanach (AL): 19
1840
Ballytrent
Rowe, W., Rev.:AL (LG) Cill Ruáin
1840
Ballytrent
Talbot, J. H.:AL (LG) Cill Ruáin

Please note: Some of the documentation from the archives of the Placenames Branch is available here. It indicates the range of research contributions undertaken by the Branch on this placename over the years. It may not constitute a complete record, and evidence may not be sequenced on the basis of validity. It is on this basis that this material is made available to the public.

Archival and research material provided on this site may be used, subject to acknowledgement. Issues regarding republication or other permissions or copyright should be addressed to logainm@dcu.ie.

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