O'Sullivan
passed Lough Gara, travelled over the Curlew mountains and the Bricklieve
mountains and on around Lough Arrow down to Knockvicar. It is claimed
that O'Sullivan Bere found the people of the Northwest friendly
and more neutral than the people from other regions through which
he had already passed. O'Sullivan passed through the village of
Knockvicar, passing by Lough Key - an area which Arthur Young referred
to as the Killarney of the West -"It is one of the most delightful
scenes ever beheld - a lake of circular form, bordered very boldly
by mountains...." At Knockvicar O'Sullivan's people rested
for the last time and from here the warriors made their way through
forested areas en-route to their final destination.
Leitrim
The
last part of O'Sullivan's long voyage took him from Knockvicar to
Leitrim where he hoped to meet with O'Rourke in O'Rourke's Castle.
However by this time only thirty-five of the original one thousand
men had survived the journey. A stone has been erected on the ruined
wall of the Castle with the O'Sullivan and O'Rourke coat of arms
the inscription reads - "Here on January 4th 1603, arrived
Donal O' Sullivan Bere and his followers after the epic march from
Beara Peninsula in fourteen days....".
Project
Co-ordinator:
Jim O'Sullivan
Marketing Officers: Claire O'Sullivan, Gene Lewis, Filipe Vilarinho
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