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Surname: Costello
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to Family Tree Information on Larry MacDonald's Genealogy Website
Recorded in the spellings of Costello (County Mayo), Costelloe (Counties
Galway and Clare), and sometimes Costellow, Costley, Cusheley, and even
Casserly, this famous surname is Irish, but of Norman-French origins. It
derives from the pre 10th century family known as the 'de Anglos' or Nangle,
which strictly speaking means 'from or of, England'. It is claimed that the
first reference to the clan in surviving registers or charters is that of
Gilbert de Nangle in in the book known as 'The four masters' and dated 1193.
This was only some twenty years after they helped Strongbow, Earl of
Pembroke, in 1169 and 1170, conquer most of the island of Ireland. It seems
that unlike most Norman families who were granted huge tracts of land by
King Henry 11nd of England, they rapidly abandoned their Norman ancestry and
became 'Gaelic'. Most Irish researchers claim that 'they saw the light', but
it seems more logical that the clan saw the opportunity for even greater
land gains by local banditry. Central government in Dublin was rarely strong
in the next seven hundred years, and soon lost control of the hinterland to
the west. The clan established itself at the barony of Costello in County
Mayo, where for centuries they 'enjoyed' a local and bloody feud with the
MacDermots. The first known holder of the surname is believed to be that of
Cumumhan Mac Casarlaigh in about 1252, whilst in the 'modern' spelling it
may be that of Teag MacCostello, chief of the clan in 1565. John Costello
was Taoiseach of Ireland in 1948 and again in 1954.
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