BROWSE

Hierarchy

county

monument

monument
Cnóbha
genitive: Chnóbha
(Irish)
Knowth
(English)

Hierarchy

county

Explanatory note

  • Gaeilge

    Ní léir brí.
    Tháinig athrú mór ar an ainm seo le himeacht aimsire; Cnogba na Sean-Ghaeilge > Crewbane (19ú haois) de réir léarscáileanna na Suirbhéireachta Ordanáis. Tá cur síos déanta ag Art Ó Maolfabhail ar an athrú seo in aiste dar teideal ‘Ilfhás ar ainm clúiteach (Cnogba > Knowth, Craud, Ballinacraud, Crewbane)’ in Celtica XXI (1990). Ba é a scríobh Seán Ó Donnabháin faoi fhuaimniú an logainm lena linn féin ná, ‘Cnoghbha is vulgarly pronounced Cru here’. De réir A.J. Hughes, ba é an foghar a chuala an Donnabhánach i logainm seo na Mí ná guta atá le fáil i gcanúintí Ultacha ar a dtugtar ‘high-back-unrounded u-sound’ (Ainm IV, 1990).
    Ní heol dúinn brí ná sanasaíocht ná aois an logainm Cnóbha. Díol suime gur ionad cónaithe ríoga a bhí ann sa ré stairiúil: ‘The metamorphosis of Tara from tomb to royal residence is paralleled at Knowth. This site (known by the medieval Irish to have been a burial mound) was chosen as their centre by the local Uí Néill kings of northern Brega from the eighth century onwards’, F.J. Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings

Centrepoint

53.6973, -6.50095latitude, longitude
Irish Grid (with letter)
Computing...
Irish Grid (without letter)
Computing...
Irish Transverse Mercator (ITM)
Computing...

Open data

Application programming interface (API)

Available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
API key required to access data
More about the Logainm API

Linked Logainm

Formats: RDF | RDF N3 | RDF JSON | RDF XML

Operated by Digital Repository of Ireland
More about Linked Logainm