Tadhg Gaelach Ó Súilleabháin (c. 1715 – 1795), known in English as Timothy O'Sullivan, was a composer of mostly Christian poetry in the Irish language whose Pious Miscellany was reprinted over 40 times in the early 19th century.[1][2]
Up to the time of his death, Tadhg Gaelach was sometimes looked after by the O'Callaghans; a relatively prosperous Ballylaneen Catholic farming family.[citation needed] He was also a frequent guest of the village Roman Catholic priest, Fr. Richard Morrissey. Other local friends and patrons included the O'Phelan (Ó Faoláin) family, and one of his last songs is written in their honour Do Seoirse agus Domhnall Ó Faoiláin[5] to be sung to the air, "Bonny Jane".[citation needed]
While manuscripts of Ó Súilleabháin's Christian poetry had already circulated before his death, and in 1802 a printed collection of twenty-five religious poems was published at Clonmel under the title Timothy O'Sullivan's Irish Pious Miscellany. Between 1816 and 1879 more than a dozen new editions of the Pious Miscellany were printed and sold in Clonmel, Cork City, Limerick, and Dublin, which leaves little doubt that it was the most widely read Irish-language book ever published before the later Gaelic revival.[4] A collection of Tadhg Gaelach's hymns were published by an tAthairPádraig Ua Duinnín in Dublin in 1903.
Further reading
An Irish-Speaking Island: State, Religion, Community, and the Linguistic Landscape in Ireland, 1770–1870, 3. Nicholas M. Wolf, (Wisconsin, 2014).
Print and Popular Culture in Ireland, 1750-1850, Niall Ó Ciosáin, (Dublin, 2010).