Doe Castle: Difference between revisions

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|county=Donegal
|county=Donegal
|picture=Doe Castle - geograph.org.uk - 417295.jpg
|picture=Doe Castle - geograph.org.uk - 417295.jpg
|picture caption=Doe Castle from the front, featuring Towerhouse and Bawn Walls
|picture caption=Doe Castle: Towerhouse and Bawn Walls
|os grid ref=C08713197
|os grid ref=C08713197
|latitude=55.135056
|latitude=55.135056

Latest revision as of 20:16, 4 April 2019

Doe Castle
Irish: Caisleán na dTuath

County Donegal


Doe Castle: Towerhouse and Bawn Walls
Location
Grid reference: C08713197
Location: 55°8’6"N, 7°51’51"W
History
Built Early 15th century
Information
Condition: Ruinous
Owned by: Heritage Ireland

Doe Castle stands in ruin near Creeslough, County Donegal, was the historical stronghold of Clan tSuibhne (Clan MacSweeney), with architectural parallels to the Scottish tower house.

Built in the early 15th century, Doe is one of the better fortalices in the north-west of Ireland.

The castle sits on a small peninsula at the head of the tidal estuary that opens into Sheephaven Bay. It is surrounded on three sides by water, with a moat cut into the rock of the landward side. The structure consists mainly of high outer walls around an interior bawn with a four-storey tower-house/keep.

History

Doe Castle was most likely built in the 15th century by the O'Donnell family, but by the 1440s it had came into the hands of the gallowglass MacSweeney family. The castle remained in the hands of the MacSweeney family for almost two hundred years until it fell into the hands of English settlers in the aftermath of the Plantation of Ulster in the early seventeenth-century.

It was here that Owen Roe O'Neill returned in 1642 to lead the Ulster Army of the Irish Confederate forces during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.

The castle changed hands repeatedly during the 17th Century struggle for control of Ireland between the English and the Irish. It is known that in 1650, Sir Charles Coote, the Governor of Londonderry, took possession of the castle.

Eventually, the castle was bought by Sir George Vaughan Hart and inhabited by his family until 1843.

Doe Castle Today

In 1932 the castle came into the hands of the Land Commission, and it 1934 was declared a national monument and was acquired by the Office of Public Works. The Towerhouse of the castle underwent a major restoration in the 1990s.

The Castle grounds are open daily and guided tours of the towerhouse are available during the summer months.

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Doe Castle)

References

Castle Doe, barmkin and keep