Carlow
Location:
Carlow,
Co. Carlow
Carlow
/ Ceatharlach |
The county capital,
Carlow was once an outpost that had to provide its own defence as
it was isolate from te Pale around dublin, Which the Anglo-Normans
ruled and defended. Carlow developed around a massive norman keep,
built in 1207-13 to guard a strategic crossing of the river barrow.
Today the keep is in ruins, home to only the pigeons that flutter
over it. |
As befits a frontier
town, Carlow's history is turbulent. Lionel, Duke of Clarance, built
a wall around it in 1361, but town and castle fell to Art MacMurrough
Kavanagh in 1405 and were put to the torch. It was taken again by
Rory Óg O'More in 1557. The castle was besieged by Cromwell's forces
in 1650, and when it fell the garrison was slaughtered. |
But even Cromwell left
his castle in better condition than it is now. The main harm was
doneby a local man, a Dr Middleton, who bought the castle and turned
it into a lunatic asylum in 1814. Wanting to enlarge the windows,
the intrepid doctor decided to use gunpowder. The explosion blew
the casle apart, leaving only the shell of the keep and its corner
towers. |
Some 16 years earlier,
Carlow had been a flaspoint of the 1798 Rebellion against the English.
On the morning of May 25, about 4000 poorly armed rebels marched
on the town. It seened deserted as the marched through its streets,
but they had walked into an ambush. They emerged from Tullow St
into a hail of musket fire. Many ran in panic into nearby houses,
but these were set alight. more than 500 were killed in the battle
of Carlow and another 200 were executed later. The remains of 417
rebels were burried across the River Barrow, at Graigue, a site
known as the Croppie Grave. |
Today's town surrounds
the castle walls, and has number of Georgian houses and some nostalgic
19th-century shopfronts. George Bernard Shaw's aunt lived in Carlow
and Shaw donated to the town, among other gifts, the 18th-century
building that is now the public library. A plaque to Shaw describes
him as a 'self-styled world-betterer'. |
Carlow Museum, at the
back of the Town Hall, contains some interesting relics of local
life, including a Victorian kitchen complete with a 'crane'for swinging
pots over the open fire, and a settle bed - a plain wooden bench
by day that opened out to become a bed at night. also on display
is the trapdoor of the gallows that was used for public executions
outside Carlow Jail. The last, in 1820, attracted a crowd of 20,000. |
Carlow's courthouse
is one of the finest neoclassical buildings in Ireland. It was built
in 1830 by Sir Richard Morrison in the Ionic style, with 12 columnms
supporting the roof. Squatting like a watchdog next to the lofty
Gothic Revival cathedral (1828-33), with its 155ft lantern tower,
is the soilid St. Patrick's College, one of the oldest seminaries
in Ireland. It was opened in 1795 to educate priests, following
a relaxation of the penal laws that banned catholic teaching. |
Across the roads of
carlow is the tower of St Mary's, the Church of Ireland parish church.
The nave dates from the early 18th century and there is a fine east
window. The tower was added in 1834. in the former Scotch on the
Athy road there is a genealogical which advises visitors on ancestral
research. |
Off the Hacketstown
road, in the demesne of Browne's Hill House, stands the grave of
a Stone Age chieftain. Browneshill Dolmen, almost 4,000 years old,
has a massive granite capstone, an estimated 100 tons, the largest
in Ireland. Alongside the path leading from the dolmen to the Browne's
Hill Road are examples of the Carlow fencing - granite posts, V-shaped
at the top, with granite slabs laid across them. This type of fencing
was commonly used in Carlow in the 19th century. |
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