Lough Key

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Lough Key

Lough Key (unknown language: Loch Cé) is a lake in the north-west of County Roscommon, to be found north-east of the town of Boyle. The lough is believed to be named after a mythical figure named Cé.[1]

Name

The name Lough Key comes from the Irish Loch Cé. In Irish mythology, Cé was the druid of the god Nuada. He was wounded in the Second Battle of Mag Tuired and fled southward until he came to Carn Corrslebe, where he rested. He saw ahead of him a beautiful plain full of flowers. He sought to reach it, and when he did, he died. When his grave was dug there, a lake burst out of it, and flooded the whole plain. It was thus named Loch Cé after him.[2]

Geography

The lake is in the northern part of the River Shannon's drainage basin. It is fed by the Boyle River, which flows from Lough Gara, through the town of Boyle, into Lough Key. From there it flows eastwards until it reaches the River Shannon just above Carrick-on-Shannon.

The area of the lough is 2,085 acres and its average depth is 17 feet.[3] There is a fine view of the lake from the N4 road as it ascends the Curlew Mountains after bypassing Boyle. The wild beauty of the view though is wilfully spoilt by a modern steel sculpture of an Irish chieftain mounted on horseback.

Historical interest

The area around Lough Key and the nearby town of Boyle, in County Roscommon, have been inhabited for thousands of years.

The lake is some two miles wide and three miles long and contains over thirty wooded islands including Castle Island, Trinity Island, Orchard Island, Stag Island, Bullock Island, and Drumman's Island. Castle Island has had a number of structures built on it over the centuries. The earliest record dates to 1184, in the Annals of Loch Cé, where a lighting strike is reported to have started a fire in "The Rock of Loch-Cé," a "very magnificent, kingly residence." Currently a folly castle, McDermott's Castle, built in the early 19th century by the King family stands on the island. Trinity]] and Church Islands each have the ruins of mediæval priories standing on them.

Archaeology digs from c.2005-2012 found that McDermott's Castle seems in fact to bring together remnants of several previous historic structures.

17th-20th centuries

The King family acquired the land around Lough Key in the 17th century Cromwellian Settlement,[4] renaming the area, hitherto Moylurg, to ‘Rockingham’. In 1809, Rockingham House was built, to the design of the famed architect John Nash[5] – was built. The house remained the seat of the Stafford-King-Harman family until it was badly damaged in a fire in 1957.[6] The house was subsequently demolished in 1970. The modernistic Moylurg Tower stands on the site today.

Lough Key Forest Park

Moylurg tower at the edge of Lough Key

Immediately to the south of the lough is Lough Key Forest Park, a popular destination for recreational walkers. The park, opened in 1972,[7] covers 865 acres, formerly part of the Rockingham estate. The Moylurg Tower, a viewing tower built in 1973, stands on the site of the old Rockingham house overlooking the lake to the north and lawns to the south.[8]

There are many amenities in the park including boat tours, boats for hire, water activities, camping and caravan park, an outdoor playground and shop. A 2007 development[9] added a number of new attractions including a forest canopy walkway and children's play areas, to cater to the "21st century visitor."[10]

Sir Cecil Stafford-King-Harman (1895–1987), second (and last) Baronet of Rockingham, ensured that the land went back to the people of Ireland through the Irish Land Commission, who subdivided the pasture land into several farms of approximately fifty acres and granted these to local people. An extensive area around the then-derelict Rockingham house became the Forest Park and this was looked after by the Department of Forestry. It is currently in the care of Coillte, a semi-state body.

The park contains the remains of five ring forts, giving evidence of the long habitation of this region.

Annalistic references

The area surrounding the lake is significant in mediæval Irish literature and legend. Starting around 1000 AD, the Annals of Boyle were compiled on Trinity Island, and from 1253 to 1590 the Annals of Lough Key continued from where the Boyle annals ended. Lough Key was also the site for the legend of Una Bháin.

Famed harpist Turlough O'Carolan is buried at Kilronan, three miles to the north of the lake.

The Annals of the Four Masters record:

  • M955.11 - The fleet of Fearghal, son of Art, upon Loch-Ce.

Pictures

Lough Key
Boathouse on the lough
Lough Key

Outside links

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References