Burnchurch Castle
Burnchurch Castle | |
County Kilkenny | |
---|---|
Burnchurch Castle | |
Type: | tower house |
Location | |
Grid reference: | S47714738 |
Location: | 52°34’33"N, 7°17’49"W |
History | |
Built 15th century | |
Information |
Burnchurch Castle is a well-preserved 15th century Norman tower house with a round gate tower in County Kilkenny. It is to be found four miles south west of Kilkenny, off the Clonmel Road, three and a half miles from Ballybur near Cuffesgrange, outside the town of Callan, nearby to Kells Priory.
The castle is said to have been built and owned by the Fitzgeralds of the house of Desmond in 15th century and continued to be occupied until 1817.
The castle and tower, along with the Church of Ireland church, and the lime trees became a 'National Monument' in 1993.[1]
Architecture
The circular turret 41 feet high still remains. A walled courtyard was originally attached to the castle. It is six storeys high, and has an unusually large number of passages and chambers inside the walls. A great hall was formerly attached to the tower's outside wall, but this has now vanished, as has most a bawn with a 41 foot tall tower at one corner. Old drawings, date unknown, show remnants of buildings.
Many tower houses have mural chambers and passages hidden away within their walls, though few have the number and complexity of those found in Burnchurch Castle. Beneath there is a vault with the principal chamber above, lying just below a gabled roof. There are numerous narrow rooms in the walls, including a "secret room" on the fourth floor.
A curved outside staircase still provides access to the three upper floors of this little tower so it can be explored. It has mullioned windows and is noteworthy for its finely carved fireplace with a joggle voussoir arch and its tall round chimney. The rounded chimney may be a later improvement.
Burnchurch is broadly similar in size and layout to Clara Castle in Clara, but differs in that the gable-end walls are carried up one story higher than the other two walls and form to elongated turrets with their won rampart walls at the highest part of the building.[2] Burnchurch Castle and Clara are good examples of the characteristic Irish-style of stepped battlements.
It is known for being one of several Irish towers with the slightly narrower sides of the castle extending up an additional floor, creating in essence a pair of tower wide turrets.
Outside links
- The Barrons, or Fitzgeralds, of Burnchurch
- Historical images:
- 'Edwin Rae Collection' (Digital Image Collection)
- 'Rootsweb'
- Irish Antiquities
References
- ↑ Appendix - Kilkenny County Council development plan. National monuments
- ↑ (Forde-Johnston 1979, p. 200)
Further reading
- Johnson, Paul (1981), Ireland: a history from the twelfth century to the present day, HarperCollins Publishers, ISBN 978-0-586-05453-6, https://books.google.com/books?id=yY8OAAAAQAAJ.
- Forde-Johnston, James L. (1979), Great mediæval castles of Britain, https://books.google.com/books?id=KEITAQAAIAAJ