Home

Who
What
Where
When
Why
Mallow Castle
 

County

Cork

Coordinates

N 52° 08' 02.22"   W 008° 38' 22.14"

Nearest town

Mallow

Grid Ref.

R 56221 98203

Map No.

80

Elevation a.s.l. (m)

56

Date of visit

Thursday 18 June 2015

GPS Accuracy (m)

3
Show Google Map              Show Monuments in the area

    
    
    
    
    
  
PREVIOUS      NEXT
From the north.


At the east end of the town of Mallow and next to the left bank of River Blackwater is Mallow Castle.
It was erected between 1584 and 1598 by Sir Thomas Norreys, or Norris, Lord President of Munster, on the same site of a previous castle built here by the Roche family in the early 13th century. This castle, which was altered by the FitzGeralds of Desmond at the end of the 13th century, in turn, replaced a preceding motte and bailey.
The building erected by Norreys was an elegant and sumptuous residence. At the death of Sir Thomas the building was inherited by his daughter Elizabeth who married Sir Joseph Jephson, an English soldier and politician, at the age of 12. They had eight childern, she died at 28. The descendants of the couple were meant to occupy the castles for many centuries, but the castle hadn't been built to withstand the attacks from the enemies, in 1689 it was burned during the Jacobite War. The Jephson, rather than restoring the damaged building, preferred to convert the stables into a new residence, and the castle fell into disrepair.
The present ruins are of a long three-storey building aligned on the northeast-southwest axis. It has two hexagonal turrets at the corners of the northwest wall. Halfway along the northwest and southeast walls there are two projecting wings. The entrance is through a doorway in the northwest wing, it faces to the northeast (45°).
The inside of the castle is an empty shell, no inner walls of floors survived, apart from a fragment of wall halfway the castle's length. The walls have plenty of mullioned windows, and have battlements at the roof level.
Below the windows there are holes through which muskets could be fired.
We came here for the first time on September 22nd, 2003.


Browse by Monument Type
Browse by County
Browse by Date of Visit
Browse by Map Number

A-Z List

Clickable Counties
Clickable OS Maps Grid

Find a Map

Multimap

The days before GPS

The Stones in the Movies

Glossary
Links
Guestbook
FAQ

What's NEW?


Search


Site view counter: 25465529

Copyright © 1994-2024 Antonio D'Imperio
All the photos, the graphics and the texts on this website are automatically copyrighted to me under the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works 1886. Any violation of the copyright will be pursued according to the applicable laws.

info@irishstones.org

Powered by AxeCMS/CustomEngine(V0.25.00 build 999) by Sergio "Axeman" Lorenzetti. (C) 2009-2015

counter