Cloonnafinneela is a townland of County Kerry, Ireland. It is one of sixteen ancient townlands of the civil parish of Kilflynn and lies roughly centrally. In the northern part it is crossed by the N69 Tralee-Listowel road, and it extends from Kilflynn town in the west to the Waterfall in the east, bordered by the Shannow and one of its tributaries. Thereafter the strip of land in a roughly north-south alignment follows the Cloonafinneela road as its western boundary.
Archaeology and history
The well of the unknown 'St. Flainn' is a holy well visited to the present day in the townland. Listed as 'Toberflyn' on 1841 and 1892 Ordnance Survey maps, it is by a tributary of the Shannow river and east-south-east of Kilflynn centre. Stones lying nearby are said to be the remains of a hermitage, the ruined dwelling of the mysterious saint. The location is 29U 489992 623062 using the Universal Transverse Mercatorgrid reference. The tale is that the crippled, blind man was visited by Holy Mary, who offered to restore his vision. He asked for the miracle of healing to be transferred to the well instead for others. The Irish version of Cloonnafinneela is unvalidated; there have been a number of different anglicized spellings. Local folklore tells of a Fineela family which lived long ago in forts evident in the landscape. No one used the forts afterwards because people said it was not right to. The name was noted on the 1841 Ordnance Survey Parish namebook as 'lawn or meadow of the murder.' The forts mentioned are amongst sites listed as National Monuments, namely ringforts, enclosures, earthworks and a possible fulacht fiadh. In 2011, plans for realignment of the N69 Tralee-Listowel road, which passes through Cloonnafinneela, gave archaeologists the opportunity to dig two test trenches. At the first site, evidence was found of iron-working with familiar smeltingwaste products. Alder charcoal found there was carbon-dated to between 432 and 595 A.D. The second site yielded rare evidence for a thatched-roofed structure which included rushes, hazel, oak and willow amongst other plants. A sample of hazel charcoal was carbon-dated to between 1450 and 1635 A.D. The townland was formerly the property ofThomas Stack, of the Stack family well-known to the area. He supported the Irish Rebellion of 1641 and the Catholic Confederation in the Irish Confederate Wars. His land was confiscated by Cromwell's forces following the Act for the Settlement of Ireland in 1652. In 1666, ownership was granted to Henry Ponsonby, a 46-year-old former soldier who fought in the New Model Army, after the Act of Settlement of 1662.