Difference between revisions of "Monea Castle"

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'''Monea Castle''' is a castle in [[Monea]] in [[Fermanagh]], within the [[townland]] of [[Castletown Monea]]
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'''Monea Castle''' is a castle in [[Monea]] in [[Fermanagh]], within the [[townland]] of [[Castletown Monea]].
  
 
It is today a State Care Historic Monument.<ref name="MC">{{cite web | title=Monea Castle | work=Environment and Heritage Service NI - State Care Historic Monuments | url=http://www.ehsni.gov.uk/state_care_monuments_2007.pdf | accessdate=2007-12-03}}</ref>
 
It is today a State Care Historic Monument.<ref name="MC">{{cite web | title=Monea Castle | work=Environment and Heritage Service NI - State Care Historic Monuments | url=http://www.ehsni.gov.uk/state_care_monuments_2007.pdf | accessdate=2007-12-03}}</ref>

Latest revision as of 13:38, 11 May 2019

Monea Castle

Fermanagh

Monea Castle1.jpg
Monea Castle
Location
Grid reference: H16474937
Location: 54°23’35"N, 7°44’53"W
History
Built 1616
Information
Owned by: (State care)

Monea Castle is a castle in Monea in Fermanagh, within the townland of Castletown Monea.

It is today a State Care Historic Monument.[1]

Features

The design of the castle, started in 1618, appears to be strongly Scots influenced.[2] It is a rectangular tower house three storeys high, with tall attics and vaulted ground floor. Two massive semi-cylindrical towers sit on either side of the entrance, flanking the short west end of the castle.[1] On the top of the towers are corbels and crow-stepped gables, giving the Scots appearance.[2]

History

Monea Castle is situated where a Maguire castle would have been based prior to the Plantation and a crannog is still visible.

Building was started in 1616 by the Rector of Devenish, the Reverend Malcolm Hamilton. It had a bawn built later, in 1622, shortly before Hamilton was promoted to become Archbishop of Cashel in 1623.

In the Irish Rebellion of 1641 it was attacked by Rory Maguire, who "slew and murthered eight Protestants" here. In 1688 it was occupied by Gustav Hamilton, the Governor of Enniskillen, who died in 1691. His wife and children continued to live at Monea, but had to sell the estate in 1704. A few decades later the castle was gutted by fire and subsequently abandoned.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Monea Castle)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Monea Castle". Environment and Heritage Service NI - State Care Historic Monuments. http://www.ehsni.gov.uk/state_care_monuments_2007.pdf. Retrieved 2007-12-03. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 O'Neill, B (ed). (2002). Irish Castles and Historic Houses. London: Caxton Editions. p. 17.