Durrow, County Laois
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Please help improve this article or section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. (January 2007) |
Durrow Darmhagh Ua nDuach |
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Location | ||
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WGS-84 (GPS) Coordinates:
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Irish grid reference S416788 |
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Statistics | ||
Province: | Leinster | |
County: | County Laois | |
Elevation: | 95m | |
Population (2006) - Town: - Environs: |
1,167 2,856 |
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Website: www.durrowvillage.com |
Durrow is a small town located in south County Laois, Ireland. The town is located on the N8 road at the junction with the N77. The river Erkina flows through Durrow and joins the River Nore about 1.5km east of the town. The town takes its name from the Irish (Darmhagh Ua nDuach - the oak plain [in the territory] of Ui Duach). The year 2008 is a celebration of 300 years of Durrow. Many local events have been organised to celebrate the culture and heritage of Durrow. The local community website contains details of all events as well as reports.
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[edit] History
The earliest recorded church in the village was in 1155. Evidence from the Archaeological Survey carried out by the O.P.W. in 1995, suggests that this area has been visited, if not inhabited, since as early as the Bronze Age. An urn-burial found on the lands of Moyne Estate dates roughly to the same period as those found at lronmills and Ballymartin (900-1400 B.C.) Fulachta Fiadh (early cooking sites) have been identified at Aharney and near Ballacolla. The numerous ring forts and other enclosures which dot the landscape point to a more permanent, if dispersed, settlement of the land by the Celts (500B.C.- 500A.D.).
There are numerous religious settlements in the area which date back to the 6th century. While the monastery founded by St. Fintan on the banks of the Erkina is perhaps the best renowned, documented evidence exists for other such establishments at Dunmore, Clonageera, Dereen, the Course wood, Tinweir, Ballinaslee, Tubberboe and Newtown.
The coming of the Normans in the 15th century sounded the death knell for many of these Early Christian settlements and the lands were subsumed (despite heated objections from the Earls Marshall, who wanted it for themselves) into the Manor of Durrow - an Episcopal Manor for the Bishops of Ossory. Indeed, it was this development that sowed the seeds for the establishment of the town of Durrow as we now know it. In 1245, Geoffrey de Turville, the Bishop of Ossory from 1244 to 1250, was granted permission from the King to hold a yearly fair at this manor for six days beginning on St. Swithin’s Day and a weekly market on a Thursday.
After the Reformation, the manor passed into the ownership of the Duke of Ormond and was eventually released on 19 February 1708 to “William Flower and his heirs, forever”. It was under the patronage of Flower and his descendants, the Lords Ashbrook, that the present town developed and prospered.
[edit] Climate
A new weather station broadcasts from Durrow providing real time data. Click Here for Current Data The station was set up in May 2008. It is a Davis ProVantage 2 station and monitors temperature, rain, wind, wind direction, humidity and atmospheric pressure.
[edit] Transport
- Durrow and Stradbally railway station opened on 12 August 1878 and finally closed on 27 March 1967.[1]
[edit] Sport
- Harps GAA is the local Gaelic Athletic Association club.
[edit] People
One of the most famous residents of Durrow has been William Carrigan.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Durrow and Stradbally station. Railscot - Irish Railways. Retrieved on 2007-10-13.
[edit] External links
- Durrow Online Community Website
- History of Durrow.
- History of the Parish of Durrow.
- Durrow News from the "Laois Nationalist"
- Durrow News from the "Kilkenny People"