| Gaelic form | Ó Flaithbheartaigh |
| Meaning | Descendant of Flaithbheartach (bright ruler / princely-acting) |
| Etymology | flaith (prince, ruler) + beartach (acting, wielding) |
| Province | Connacht (primary) |
| Core counties | Galway (west Galway — Connemara, Aran Islands), Mayo |
| Rank in Ireland | Common — one of the great Connacht surnames |
| Variant spellings | Flaherty, O'Flaherty, Flahertie, Flahery |
O'Flaherty — in Irish, Ó Flaithbheartaigh — translates roughly as 'bright ruler' or 'one who acts the prince'. The name derives from a personal name combining flaith (ruler, nobleman) and beartach (active, wielding). It was a name given to a founding ancestor whose behaviour or status embodied the qualities of a chieftain.
The sept descends from Flaithbheartach, a King of Connacht who died in 1016. The O'Flahertys were among the most powerful Gaelic families in western Connacht for centuries, ruling a territory they called Iar-Connacht — 'West Connacht' — the wild Atlantic coast of Galway west of Lough Corrib.
The name was anglicised as O'Flaherty and then shortened to Flaherty. The Latin tag carved above the old Galway city gate — From the fury of the O'Flaherties, good Lord deliver us — reflects how the citizens of Galway town viewed their neighbours to the west.
The O'Flaherty heartland is the territory west of Lough Corrib in County Galway: Connemara, the Aran Islands, and the coastal regions around Clifden and Roundstone. This is one of the most Irish-speaking areas in Ireland today — the Connemara Gaeltacht — and its linguistic continuity traces directly to the cultural world the O'Flaherties dominated.
After the Norman expansion into Connacht, the O'Flaherties were pushed progressively westward. They had once held territory as far east as Tuam, but by the 16th century their power was confined to the west. Some septs moved north into Mayo. Flaherty remains a common surname across the Connacht province.
At their height, the O'Flaherties ruled a substantial territory. They built castles throughout west Galway — Aughnanure Castle on Lough Corrib (still standing) was their principal fortress — and maintained fleets of galleys that controlled the inshore waters of the Connemara coast. Their military culture was fierce enough to earn them the reputation that gave rise to the Galway gate inscription.
The most famous connection between the O'Flaherties and Irish history comes through marriage: Gráinne Ní Mháille (Grace O'Malley), the famous pirate queen of Connacht, was first married to Dónal an Chogaidh O'Flaherty ('Donal of the Battles'). Her marriage brought the O'Malley and O'Flaherty families into alliance and gave Grace O'Malley a base in O'Flaherty territory from which to conduct her Atlantic enterprises.
The Cromwellian settlement of the 1650s systematically dispossessed the Gaelic nobility. The O'Flaherties, like most great Irish families, lost their lands. The Connacht transplantation drove many landholding families across the Shannon. Those who remained became tenants on what had been their own territory. Roderic O'Flaherty, a dispossessed O'Flaherty chieftain, wrote Ogygia (1685), one of the earliest histories of Ireland in the modern period — composed from a West Galway cabin by a man who had lost everything.
The Famine hit Connemara with particular savagery. West Galway had some of the highest mortality and emigration rates in Ireland. The poverty of the region meant that Famine-era emigration was often assisted — landlords paid passage to clear their estates. O'Flaherty emigrants went to Boston, New York, and Philadelphia in large numbers, and to Australia and Canada.
The Flaherty surname is common throughout the Irish-American communities of New England and New York. Many arrived speaking Irish — the Connemara Gaeltacht was Irish-speaking into the 20th century — which set them apart from other Irish emigrants. Irish-speaking communities established themselves in parts of Boston and New York, and the cultural memory of this is preserved in places like the Connemara-Boston connection that scholars have documented.
The Clifden, Oughterard, and Galway registration districts cover west Galway. Search free at IrishGenealogy.ie.
The parishes of Omey, Clifden, Ballindoon, and Ross cover the Connemara O'Flaherty heartland. Records from the 18th and early 19th century survive for some parishes.
Aughnanure Castle (now an OPW heritage site) was the O'Flaherty stronghold. The estate records of its subsequent owners — the Martins of Ballinahinch — contain tenant lists that include Flaherty families from the pre-Famine period.
Search Flaherty in the Galway and Mayo baronies. In the Clifden Poor Law Union area, you will find dense concentrations of Flaherty families in the 1850s valuation.
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