The Mountains of Cooley • Placenames and the People
The cadgers were the women who walked over the mountains from Omeath to Ravensdale and Dundalk with their baskets of herring on their backs. The route over the mountains was the shortest way and soon came to be known as Cadgers' Pad. This video which has been funded by the Heritage Council, examines our rich legacy of Gaelic place-names in the Cooley Mountains. Through the summer we captured drone footage of walkers on the Cadgers’ Pad; we tracked the hunt for the Brown Bull through Doolargy and Ballymakellett; we took a look at the many O’Neill families of Glenmore; and we heard about the forty families cleared out of Moneycrockroe to make way for the landlord’s bullocks. The video was captured, shot and edited by Lightstorm Media, / @danmc0605 The video was produced by the Team at Carlingford Lough Heritage Trust. The human record is visible throughout the mountains; great burial cairns on the summits; ancient crop ridges and ringforts on the lower slopes; ruins of booley huts in the river glens. Through the turf fields and the forests we can follow the many miles of stone walls built as relief works in the Great Famine, and occasionally we can find the lazy beds where people tried to grow healthy potatoes. There is another record of human activity. This is also a cultural landscape. The people who walked and worked these hills took ownership of them by describing and naming the places they used. Many of those names are still here, still in use, still descriptive and still culturally important. [Interview with Eve Campbell, archaeologist] “Placenames are key to understanding how people made meaning for themselves in this landscape. They were like a mental map for those who used these mountains through more than 5000 years, for hunting and grazing and cutting turf, as a place of refuge and a route to inland areas. The names had practical meaning. The same hill or rock may have different names depending on where you view it from, which can be useful"

Tracks & Trails S13 Ep1,part i Ravensdale Forest to Omeath, County Louth with Anton Savage

Chronological History of Carlingford - The Ages of Carlingford

Percy French, 1854 -- 1920, with Brendan O'Dowda

Foxes Rock - Cooley Mountains - Co. Louth

PICTURESQUE CARLINGFORD

10 Mind-Blowing Differences Between the Irish and the Scottish | History, Culture & Identity

Hiking in the Cooley Mountains - Clermont Cairn to Carnavaddy

My Golden Retriever Heals a Terrified Rescue Kitten in Just 3 Meetings!

Martin Galvin at Brendan Huges memorial unveiling in cooley mountains.

An Irish Soldier recalls World War One, 1965

93 Year Old Irish Soldier describes World War One, 1988

D-Day Through British Eyes: The Story America Doesn't Tell
![The Táin Bó Cúailgne - The Cattle Raid of Cooley [Part 1] (Ulster Cycle - Irish Legends)](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/MZ4dq86f74c/hqdefault.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEjCNACELwBSFryq4qpAxUIARUAAAAAGAElAADIQj0AgKJDeAE=&rs=AOn4CLCzifZsnRxHNW89IRGD2FmRN4xGwA)
The Táin Bó Cúailgne - The Cattle Raid of Cooley [Part 1] (Ulster Cycle - Irish Legends)

Assassin's Creed on the Cooley Peninsula? | Treasure Ireland

1964: Life in DONEGAL | Tonight | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

107 Year Old Irish Farmer Reflects on Change, 1965

The Truth About the Black Irish: Ireland’s Hidden DNA

BLACKROCK SEASIDE VILLAGE COUNTY LOUTH

Shillelaghmaking

