Kilnoe

Kilnoe
An Chill Nua
Civil parish
Kilnoe

Location in Ireland

Coordinates: 52°53′08″N 8°38′33″W / 52.885551°N 8.642513°W / 52.885551; -8.642513Coordinates: 52°53′08″N 8°38′33″W / 52.885551°N 8.642513°W / 52.885551; -8.642513
Country Ireland
Province Munster
County County Clare

Kilnoe (Irish: An Chill Nua[1]) is a civil parish in County Clare, Ireland. It is a rural area, part of the Roman Catholic parish of Bodyke.

Location

Kilnoe parish lies in the barony of Tulla Upper, 3.75 miles (6.04 km) southwest of Scarriff. It is 5 by 3.5 miles (8.0 by 5.6 km) and covers 10,512 acres (4,254 ha). The land in the east and center of the parish is mountainous, moorish, and boggy. The west is more suitable for farming. It contains Loughs Annilloon, St. Bridget, Derrymore, and Kilgory.[2]

In 1837 there were the ruins of the castle of Coolreath near the southern shore of Lough O’Grady and a ruined castle at Ballynahince.[3] Neither of these castles are mentioned in the list of castles of 1580, perhaps because they had not been built at that time.[4] As of 1841 the population was 3,482 in 574 houses.[2]

Townlands

The parish contains the townlands of Annaghneal, Ballydonaghan, Ballynahinch, Caherhurley, Clogher, Clonmoner, Coolready, Coolreagh, Coolreagh Beg, Coolreagh More, Drummond, Inchalughoge, Kilgory, Kilnoe and Lisbarreen.[5]

Church history

The name "Kilnoe" is not appropriate for a church. Since there is a holy well dedicated to Saint Mochuille, the church was probably also dedicated to that saint. There is little left of the old church, but there is a large churchyard beside the ruin,[4] The southern part of Tuamgraney parish was combined with the medieval parish of Kilnoe early in the 18th century to form the Catholic parish of Bodyke.[6] The present Roman Catholic parish of Bodyke encompasses Bodyke, Kilnoe and Tuamgraney, and is part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Killaloe.[7]

References

Citations

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/12/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.