Template:FP-Navan Fort: Difference between revisions

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|pic=Navan Fort, County Armagh - geograph.org.uk - 43871.jpg
|pic=Navan Fort, County Armagh - geograph.org.uk - 43871.jpg
|cap=Navan Fort, County Armagh
|cap=Navan Fort, County Armagh
|text='''Navan Fort''' is an large, ancient ringfort in County Armagh, famous in legend as the seat of the Kings of Ulster, and known in the ancient poems as ''Emaın Macha''.
|text='''Navan Fort''' is an large, ancient ringfort in [[County Armagh]], famous in legend as the seat of the Kings of Ulster, and known in the ancient poems as ''Emaın Macha''.


According to Irish mythology, Emain Macha was one of the great royal sites of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland and the capital of the Ulaid; the men of Ulster. All the buildings have long since disappeared, but the site retains a grand circular enclosure containing a circular mound and the remains of a ring barrow in its centre, where the kings' hall once stood.}}<noinclude>{{Preview FP|Navan Fort}}
According to Irish mythology, Emain Macha was one of the great royal sites of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland and the capital of the Ulaid; the men of Ulster. All the buildings have long since disappeared, but the site retains a grand circular enclosure containing a circular mound and the remains of a ring barrow in its centre, where the kings' hall once stood.}}<noinclude>{{Preview FP|Navan Fort}}


[[Category:Front Page data templates|Navan Fort]]
[[Category:Front Page data templates|Navan Fort]]

Revision as of 08:48, 8 May 2021

Navan Fort, County Armagh

Navan Fort

Navan Fort is an large, ancient ringfort in County Armagh, famous in legend as the seat of the Kings of Ulster, and known in the ancient poems as Emaın Macha.

According to Irish mythology, Emain Macha was one of the great royal sites of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland and the capital of the Ulaid; the men of Ulster. All the buildings have long since disappeared, but the site retains a grand circular enclosure containing a circular mound and the remains of a ring barrow in its centre, where the kings' hall once stood. (Read more)