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Origin of the name GOBNAT.
Etymology of the
name GOBNAT.
Meaning of the baby name GOBNAT.
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GOBNAT.
A form of Irish Gobnait
(q.v.), meaning "little
beak," from a diminutive of the Gaelic word gob (bill, beak).
(A Dictionary of the Gaelic Language, Macleod, 1853).
In Calendar
of Oengus, at Jan. 20th, we read "A splendid four I sew
together on one feast that is holiest, Molaca, Moeca, Sebastianus, and
Oenu." In notes from the Lebar Brecc, at Jan 20th, we
read: "Molaca, i.e., at Lann Becuir, in Bregia, he is. Or it
may be Lochine, son of Dubdliged, i.e., from Telach Min Molaga, in Fir
Maighe in Munster." Lann Beachaire could also mean the church
(literally enclosure) of the bee-hive, for beachaire means bee-hive as
well as bee-farmer. In the Cork Historical and Archaeological
Journal (March, 1897) there are some legends concerning St. Gobnata,
of Ballyvourney, near Macroom, and of her beachaire, or
"bee-hive," which is stated to have been changed into a brass
helmet, and also into a bell. Gobnata, recte Gobnait, is a
feminine form of Goban,
and the name Gobnata is contracted from Gobanait.
Dr. Whitley Stokes, in Calendar of Oengus, p. cclxx., says that
Gobnait, or Gobnat, means "little mouth," but this explanation
is very doubtful. Miss M. T. Kelly, in Cork Journal, says
that Gobnata is called Abigail
by the English, and was known in Ireland as Gobnait, Gobnit,
Gobinet,
and Gobnata, while at the present day the poor people, especially in
County Limerick, call her Deborah
and Judith,
which, by their usual abbreviations of Debby
and Judy,
are common among the peasantry. In the Indulgences granted in 1601
for the feast day of this saint by Pope Clement VIII. (a copy of which
is included in the Carew Papers) this pontiff mentions her as St. Gobeneta.
Miss Kelly says that the date of St. Gobnata's birth is uncertain, but
it is supposed that she was born either at the end of the fifth or at
the beginning of the sixth century. Consequently, according to the
Life of St. Gobnata, there were hive-bees at Ballyvourney in the
sixth century. The people of South Limerick call Gobnata by the
name of Deborah, and it is curious that this name Deborah is the
ordinary Hebrew word for bee. (Historical
and Topographical Notes, etc., White, 1905)
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