John O'Mahony (antiquarian)

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John O'Mahony (1844–1912) was an Irish

Catholic priest, antiquarian, writer and founder member of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society.[1]

Born near

St Patrick's College, Maynooth.[1] He was ordained in 1870 and moved to Cork city where he was a curate in South (St. Finbar's) Parish.[1]

During the 1880s, he was a supporter of the Land League, Home Rule movement and of Charles Stewart Parnell's Irish Parliamentary Party.[1] This political position was at odds with that of the then Bishop of Cork,[2] William Delany, who transferred O'Mahony out of Cork city to a rural parish.[3][4] Despite an appeal to Rome, this "demotion" was not overturned.[5] After Delany's death, O'Mahony returned to Cork to North (Cathedral) Parish.[1]

In later life, O'Mahony was a supporter of the

Gaelic League and was president of the Maynooth Union.[1] Having "literary and antiquarian interests", he was a founder member of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society, and contributed a number of articles to the society's journal.[1]

O'Mahony died at Crookstown, County Kildare on 4 January 1912. A statue of him, reputedly weighing 11 tons, was erected in the Catholic church in Cloghduv.[1]

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