Roscommon Castle

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The location of Roscommon Castle was both strategic and symbolic. Connacht was one of the last Irish kingdoms to fall under Anglo-Norman rule after their invasions of the late 12th century. The powerful Ó Conchobair (O’Conor) kings had fought, and politically manoeuvred, with the invaders in the decades following the invasions. By the 1260s, the Anglo-Normans were locked into a deadly conflict with Aedh, son of Felim Ó Conchobair, the last King of Connacht. One of the traditional Ó Conchobair power bases was a crannóg here, on Loch na nÉan (Loughnaneane or Lough Nea) that translates to ‘the lake of the birds’. This was a place steeped in myth and legend. A key character in the famous epic Táin Bó Cúailgne, Fergus Mac Róich, King of Ulster, is said to have been buried on the shores of the lake. It was also said to be an entry point to the Otherworld. The decision to site an Anglo-Norman royal castle in this storied landscape, right next to the ancestral home of the Ó Conchobairs was a highly symbolic act indeed.

However, less than a century after it was completed, the O’Conors took possession of Roscommon castle in 1340 and held it for nearly two hundred years. However, in 1569, the castle was surrendered to the English. It was later granted to Sir Nicholas Malby in 1578, who spent a vast sum of money modernising the castle to make it fit for a member of the Tudor elite. You can see evidence for this process of modernisation in the large rectangular windows, particularly visible in the north-east of the castle. He also built an extensive walled garden, fishponds and a grand tree-lined avenue which led to Roscommon town.

Roscommon Castle was under siege by Hugh O’Donnell during the Nine Years War in 1596, and again in 1599. The castle was also attacked during the Confederate Wars of the 1640s. The bloodshed didn’t end there, as Oliver Cromwell’s forces seized the castle in 1652 and destroyed the fortifications. A fire in 1690 did severe damage to the castle and it was left to fall into disrepair through the 18th and 19th centuries.

This is not my video. With thanks to and permission of the Office of Public Works Contributor: Frank Scott Research by Roscommon Town Team, Roscommon Heritage Group and local historians. Filmed and Produced by Mimar Media , Commissioned by Roscommon Town Team

Directions

Roscommon town is a two hour drive from Dublin, an hour and ten minutes from both Sligo town and Galway City, 1.5 hours from Westport, and a half hour drive from Athlone. The castle itself lies on the outskirts of Roscommon town. Leave the square in the town centre heading for Castlebar and Galway, and take the first turn to the left, between buildings. There is no signpost. If you arrive at the roundabout, you have gone too far. What you are looking for is the town’s park. The castle is accessible through the park over a wooden ramp all year round.


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