Parke's Castle
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Rising three storeys tall, in an idyllic setting on the banks of Lough Gill, in County Leitrim in the Irish Republic, Parke’s Castle is a plantation era castle. In 1610 Robert Parke completed his fortified manor house on the site of an earlier fifteenth-century O'Rourke (Uí Ruairc) castle. He kept the walls of the original bawn - a spacious pentagonal defensive area - and demolished the O'Rourke tower house in the centre. The stones of O’Rourke’s tower were used to build the three-storey manor on the eastern side, eventually adorned with mullioned windows and diamond-shaped chimneys.
One of two round flankers guarding the north side of the bawn forms one end of the manor. The other end has the gatebuilding with an arched entrance leading into the enclosure. Inside the courtyard are many stone work buildings and a covered well. There is also a postern gate and a sally port, through there are no flankers on the lake shore. This may be explained by the likelihood that the water level was 3 meters higher in the seventeenth century and would have lapped up against the bawn walls. These waters may have fed the moat that formerly surrounded the bawn. Excavations in 1972-73 revealed the base of the original O'Rourke tower house beneath the courtyard cobbles, and this is now exposed to view. This may date back to the 1100's Gaelic Chieftain of Bréifne, Tiernan (Tigernán) O'Rourke. It was in this tower house that Francisco de Cuellar, the shipwrecked Armada officer, was entertained by Brian O'Rourke. In later years de Cuellar was to write of his host: "Although this chief is a savage, he is a good Christian and an enemy of the heretics and is always at war with them". O'Rourke was eventually captured, indicted and executed for high treason in London in 1591. The Parkes, who subsequently acquired his confiscated property, remained at Newtown, or Leitrim Castle - as it was formerly known - until the end of the seventeenth century, when it was deserted.
[edit] Restoration
The castle had extensive and sensitive restoration carried out at the end of the 20th century by the Office of Public Works. The window glazing was reinstated, and local craftsmen restored the timber stair and the mortice and tenon oak roof, using techniques of the 17th century.
[edit] Location and access
Parke’s Castle is located 5 kilometers NW of Dromahair on the Sligo road (the R286) 12k from Sligo. The castle is open March: 17 - 20, April - June: Tuesdays to Sundays, July to mid-September: Tuesdays to Sundays, October: Tuesdays to Sundays. A small admission fee is charged, granting access to the castle, exhibitions and audio-visual facilities. There is access for visitors with disabilities to the ground floor.
[edit] External links
- Leitrim County Council
- LeitrimTourism.com
- [1]- The Office of Public Works