Rahinnane Castle is a tower house and National Monument located in County Kerry, Ireland.[2][3]
Rahinnane Castle | |
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Native name Caisleán Ráthanáin[1] (Irish) | |
Type | tower house atop ringfort |
Location | Rahinnane, Ventry, County Kerry, Ireland |
Coordinates | 52°08′35″N 10°23′00″W / 52.143050°N 10.383232°W |
Owner | State |
Official name | Rahinnane Castle, Ringfort & Souterrain |
Reference no. | 10045 |
Location
editRahinnane Castle is located 1.73 km (1.07 mi) northwest of Ventry, in the west of the Dingle Peninsula.[4]
History
editThe ringfort on the site was built in the 7th or 8th century AD. The Irish name was originally Rath Fhionnáin — Finan's ringfort.
Local tradition once claimed that this piece of land was the last in Ireland held by the Vikings, as it was so easily defended.[5]
The stone tower house was built in the 15th or 16th century by the FitzGeralds, hereditary Knights of Kerry.[6]
In 1602, towards the end of the Nine Years' War, the castle was taken by Sir Charles Wilmot. It was ruined during the Cromwellian conquest (1649–53).[7][8]
Building
editThe ancient earthwork featured a 9 metres (30 ft) deep ditch, an entrance in the southwest and a souterrain in the southeast.
The castle was rectangular and three storeys tall. Most of the outer walls remain; on the inside there is some mural stairway, traces of vaulting and a blind arcade. Two corner turrets are also visible.
More than half the outer walls of the three-storey castle remain.[9]
References
edit- ^ "Caisleán Ráthanáin/Rahinnane Castle". Logainm.ie.
- ^ Schorr, Frank. "Rahinnane Castle". www.castles.ancientireland.org.
- ^ Alcock, Leslie (27 June 1963). "Dinas Powys: An Iron Age, Dark Age, and Medieval Settlement in Glamorgan". University of Wales Press – via Google Books.
- ^ "Irish Castles - Rahinnane Castle". www.britainirelandcastles.com.
- ^ "Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland". The Society. 27 June 2018 – via Google Books.
- ^ Vaughan-Thomas, Wynford; Hales, Michael (27 June 1980). Secret landscapes: mysterious sites, deserted villages, and forgotten places of Great Britain and Ireland. Select Editions. ISBN 978-1-85648-080-2 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Ancient to Medieval (And Slightly Later) History - Rahinnane Castle, County Kerry, Ireland Rahinnane..." Ancient to Medieval (And Slightly Later) History.
- ^ Administrator. "Ventry - Ceann Trá". www.dingle-peninsula.ie.
- ^ "Rahinnane Castle". irishantiquities.bravehost.com.