O'Dea Castle

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O'Dea Castle

County Clare


O'Dea Castle
Location
Grid reference: R28328501
Location: 52°54’41"N, 9°3’59"W
History
Built 1470–90
Information

O'Dea Castle, also known as Dysert O'Dea Castle, is an Irish fortified tower house, loosely described as a castle, at Dysert O'Dea the former O'Dea clan stronghold, three miles from Corofin in County Clare.

The name ' Dysert O'Dea' is from the Irish Dísert, meaning "Hermitage", and from the O'Dea clan who owned the lands.[1]

The castle is found just off the R476 road. It was built between 1470 and 1490 by Diarmaid O'Dea, Lord of Cineal Fearmaic, and stands some 50 feet high on a limestone outcrop base measuring 20 feet by 40 feet.[2][3] The tower is adjacent to Dysert O'Dea Monastery.

History

The Battle of Dysert O'Dea, which drove the Anglo-Normans from the region for over 200 years, took place at this site on 10 May 1318. The castle was built between 1470 and 1490 by Diarmaid O'Dea, Lord of Cineal Fearmaic. The Earl of Ormond took the castle from the O'Dea clan in 1570 by force. By 1584, however, they had regained it. At that time, Domhnall Maol O'Dea was listed as owner. Domhnall supported the northern Chiefs in the Nine Years' War of 1594-1603 and subsequently Dysert Castle fell to the Protestant Bishop of Kildare, Daniel Neylon, who in 1594 bequeathed it to his son, John.

The castle soon returned to the O'Dea clan. Conor Cron O'Dea supported the Confederates in the Confederate War and participated in the successful siege of Ballyalla Castle in 1642.

After the fall of Limerick]] in 1651 to the Cromwellian forces, they maintained a small garrison here. When they left, the soldiers demolished the battlements, upper floors and staircase. The Neylon family then returned but during the reign of King Charles II, Conor Cron O'Dea regained the castle. Conor's sons, Michael and James, supported the cause of King James II and once again lost the castle. The lands passed to the Synge family but the castle eventually and gradually fell into ruin.[4] In 1970, John O'Day of Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin purchased the tower and had it restored. The castle was then leased to the Dysert Development Association, which, with support from the Irish Tourist Board, opened it as "The Dysert O'Dea Castle Archaeology Centre" in 1986. It showed an exhibition of local artefacts from the stone age to 1922.[4]

The tower also won the "Clare Tourism Award" for being one of the most authentically rebuilt castles in Ireland.

Today

Today, the centre is known as the Clare Archaeology Centre, with exhibits of local archaeological artefacts from 1000 BC to 1700 AD, local history over the last three centuries, and a wall walk of parts of the castle. The Dysert O'Dea Archeology Trail includes sites around the tower, including the remains of the Dysert O'Dea Monastery.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about O'Dea Castle)

References

  1. Caisleán Uí Dheá: Placenames Database of Ireland
  2. Cronin, Richard: 'Dysart O'Dea Castle, Co. Clare'
  3. Breen, Martin: 'The Other Clare' Volume 9, page 17 (Shannon Archaeological and Historical Society, April 1985)
  4. 4.0 4.1 Cronin, Richard: 'Dysert O'Dea - A history trail - Guide and Map' (Dysert Development Association, 1989)
  • Ua Cróinín, Risteárd (Richard Cronin): 'O'Dea: Ua Deághaidh: The Story of a Rebel Clan' (Ballinakella Press, 1992) ISBN 0-946538-07-7
  • Hayes-McCoy, G.A.: 'Irish Battles - A Military History of Ireland' (Appletree Press, 1990) ISBN 0-86281-250-X