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abbeys longford

Longford Abbeys
Choose from our selection of abbeys in longford county below - to view details on each, just click 'More'
4 abbeys in longford county
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Welcome Picture of Abbeyshrule Cistercian Abbey
Abbeyshrule Cistercian Abbey
Abbeyshrule, Longford
Abbeyshrule is situated east of Ballymahon in a picturesque valley of the River Inny. A Cistercian Abbey was founded here in 1150 and was one of the earliest in the country following the success of the first foundation at Melifont in County Louth. The Abbey was founded by the O'Farrells and was eventually closed by Queen Elizabeth 1 during the Tudor suppression of the monasteries. The lands were granted to Robert Dillon, Earl of Roscommon. The adjoining graveyard contains part of the only hi...
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Cistercian Abbey
Abbeyshrule, Longford
A focal point of the northern midlands where the provinces of Leinster, Ulster and Connaught all converge, Longford, where history and literature, tragedy and triumph are all woven together, takes its name from the ancient stronghold of the O'Farrell family (Long Fort - Fort of the O'Farrells). Bordered to the West by the majestic River Shannon, Longford is a county of rolling plains and picturesque stretches of water. The highest pint of the county, Cairn Hill, is only 279 m high, but from a...
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Abbeylara Abbey
Abbeylara, Granard, Longford
Near the shore of Lough Kinale are the slight remains of a thirteenth century abbey founded by an anglo-Norman, richard Tuite. It was plundered by Edward Bruce after the sack of Granard, but it survived until the dissolution and the tow of its abbots became bishops of Clonmacnois. A semicircular earthwork north of the village is regarded locally as the site of the original church founded here by St Patrick about 460. From the shore of Lough Kinale , 1 mile north -east of Abbeylara, p...
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Abbeylaragh cistercian Abbey
Abbeylaragh, Abbeylara, Longford
A Cistercian Abbey founded by Richard Tuit in 1211 and colonised from St. Mary's in Dublin in 1214. It was pillaged by Edward Bruce in 1315. The only surviving parts of the Abbey are the crossing of 1214, and the tower inserted over it in the 15th century. The tower was approached by an inserted stairway; the tower had a barrel vault over the crossing....
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