Clough Castle

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Clough Castle

County Down


Clough Castle
Location
Grid reference: J409403
History
Information
Condition: ruined
Owned by: National Trust

Clough Castle in County Down is a ruined Anglo-Norman motte-and-bailey. The ruins stand in the townland of Clough, near the junction of the A25 and A24 roads.[1] Clough Castle motte and bailey and tower are State Care Historic Monuments, and are in the ownership of nte#.

Features

These ruins present an excellent example of an Anglo-Norman castle with an added stone tower. A small kidney-shaped bailey lies south of a large mound, originally separated from it by a ditch 7 feet deep.[1] The motte is 82 feet high and on top is a stone tower, enlarged to become a tower house in the 15th century. It is sited off-centre as much of the rest of the top of the motte was occupied by a large hall, which apparently burned down. Around the motte is a ditch, and on the south-east side a low crescent shaped bailey, which was probably once joined to the motte by a wooden bridge.[2]

Excavations

Excavations on the summit of the mound in 1950 revealed that originally (in the late 12th or early 13th century) the top of the motte was surrounded by a timber palisade within which were pits for archers. Also found was the foundation of a long rectangular hall in the north-east half of the area, probably built in the mid 13th century. Later in the same century a small rectangular stone keep was built to the south-west, two storeys high and surviving to this day, having been conserved in 1981-82. In the late Middle Ages, after what appears to have been a period of disuse, it was restored and added to, resulting in an L-shaped tower house.[1]

Pictures

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Clough Castle)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland (1983). Historic Monuments of Northern Ireland. Belfast: HMSO. p. 98. 
  2. Harbinson, P. (1992). Guide to National and Historic Monuments of Ireland. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. p. 107.