Rahinnane Castle

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Rahinnane Castle

County Kerry

Rahinnane Castle - geograph.org.uk - 257388.jpg
Rahinnane Castle
Type: Tower house and ringfort
Location
Grid reference: Q36920166
Location: 52°8’35"N, 10°22’60"W
History
Information

Rahinnane Castle is a tower house in County Kerry standing in the middle of an ancient ringfort or 'rath'. The castle is designated as a 'National Monument'.[1]

Location

Rahinnane Castle is to be found one miles north-west of Ventry, in the west of the Dingle Peninsula.[2]

History

The ringfort on the site was built in the 7th or 8th century AD. The Irish name was originally Rath Fhionnáin, meaning 'Finan's ringfort'.

Local tradition once claimed that this piece of land was the last in Ireland held by the Vikings, as it was so easily defended.[3]

The stone tower house was built in the 15th or 16th century by the FitzGeralds, hereditary Knights of Kerry.[4]

In 1602, towards the end of the Nine Years' War, the castle was taken by Sir Charles Wilmot. It was ruined during the Cromwellian conquest (1649–53).[5][6]

Structure

The castle

The earliest feature is the ring-fort, an Iron Age fort site consisting of a ditch 30 feet deep, an entrance in the south-west and a souterrain in the south-east.

Rahinnane Castle was built in the 15th or 16th in the centre of the ringfort. It was rectangular and three storeys tall. Most of the outer walls remain; on the inside there is some mural stairway, traces of vaulting and a blind arcade. Two corner turrets are also visible.

Today it stands in ruin inside the circular earthwork. More than half the outer walls of the three-storey castle remain.[7]

References