Quin Abbey

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Quin Abbey

County Clare


Quin Abbey
Location
Grid reference: R41887457
Location: 52°49’9"N, 8°51’47"W
Village: Quin
Order: Franciscan
History
Built 1402-1433
Established: c. 1350 (church),
1433 (abbey)
Founder: MacNamara family
Disestablished: 1541
Information

Quin Abbey, in Quin in County Clare, was built between 1402 and 1433 by Sioda Cam MacNamara, for Fathers Purcell and Mooney, friars of the Franciscan order. Although mostly roofless, the structure of the abbey is relatively well preserved. There is an intact cloister, and many other surviving architectural features make the friary of significant historical value.[1]

History

The cloisters at Quin Abbey

A far earlier monastery had existed on the site, which burned down in 1278. A Norman castle was built soon after by Thomas de Clare, a military commander.[2] The foundations of the castle's enormous corner towers can still be seen.

Around 1350 the castle, by then a ruin, was rebuilt as a church by the McNamara clan. It was this structure which the MacNamaras subsequently rebuilt as the present abbey, properly called a friary.

In 1541, during the Reformation, King Henry VIII dissolved and confiscated the friary and it passed into the hands of Conor O'Brian, Earl of Thomond. In about 1590 the MacNamaras regained control of the site and once again set about repairing and restoring it.

By 1640 the building was still operating as a monastic institution notwithstanding a hundred years of the reformation and in about that year it became a college which is said to have had 800 students. Oliver Cromwell arrived only 10 years later, murdering the friars and destroying the friary.

In 1671 the building was once again restored, but never regained its former status. Eventually in 1760 the friars were expelled, although the last Friar, John Hogan, remained there until his death in 1820, by which time the buildings were ruined by neglect.[3]

Visiting

The abbey is roughly nine miles from the county town, Ennis. A visitor centre is located near the building and the structure and grounds can be visited free of charge. A caretaker is permanently based at the monument. Floodlighting has recently been installed. The graveyard surrounding the friary is still in use.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Quin Abbey)

References

  1. 75th Annual Report of the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland; Clonmacnois, King's County. Dublin: A. Thom & Co, 1906
  2. Brian Hodkinson, Was Quin Castle Completed?, North Munster Antiquarian Journal, Vol. 44, 2004, pp.53-8
  3. C. P. Meehan, The Rise & Fall of the Irish Franciscan Monasteries; James Duffy & Sons, Dublin 1877.