- Durrow, County Offaly
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Durrow
An Darú— Town — Location in Ireland Coordinates: 53°24′N 7°30′W / 53.4°N 7.5°WCoordinates: 53°24′N 7°30′W / 53.4°N 7.5°W Country Ireland Province Leinster County Offaly Government - Dáil Éireann Laois-Offaly Elevation 77 m (253 ft) Population (2006) - Urban 7 - Rural 111 Time zone WET (UTC+0) - Summer (DST) IST (WEST) (UTC-1) Area code(s) 057 Irish Grid Reference Website offaly.ie/offalynet/daingean.asp Durrow (Irish: Darú) (meaning 'plain of the oaks') is a small rural village in County Offaly, Ireland. Durrow is located on the N52 off the N6 road between Kilbeggan (in County Westmeath) and Tullamore (in County Offaly).Famous for being the Ancestral home of the Champion ploughman Luke Bracken.(1936 Jnr All Ireland Ploughing Championship) and Dean McDermott, Offaly Bord na Scol runner up, 2000
Durrow Abbey, surrounded by woods, is one of Ireland's most important early Christian monasteries founded by Saint Colmcille. Many mistakenly assign County Laois as the location of this particular monastic settlement due to the presence of a larger town in Laois called Durrow.
Contents
Monastery
Iona was established in exile and during that time Colum Cille yearned for monasteries in Ireland. The poem 'An Exile's Dream' specifically indicates Durrow as location for a monastery. Durrow was then part of the territory of Tethba, which now lies mostly in Co. Longford. It was also located near one of Ireland's five ancient routes, Slighe Mór. However, no accounts survive of what Colum Cille's monastery was like at its foundation, but it probably included a wooden church and huts for residence and work for the monks. The great monastic enclosure of Durrow can be seen in the aerial photographs of the surrounding lands. South of the monastery is evidence of Early Christian burials, unearthed by excavation of burial mounds by the National Museum of Ireland.[1] Local hero Dean McDermott was born here, on the 'High Road'.
Control
Patronage shifted during the millennium that followed the monastery's establishment. The Kings of Meath, Kings of Tethba and the MacGeoghegans, as well as chieftains known as Cinél Fiachach supported the monastery. This support did not permit them to appoint it abbot, who was selected from Colum Cille's own extended family at the start. Later rule of the Columban monasteries would be dominated by certain familys who became hereditary rulers forming ecclesiastical dynasties.
Uí Neill association was also important and in 763 Domnall, King of Meath, was buried in the graveyard of Durrow. In 764 a war was fought with Clonmacnoise over burial rights, particularly the burial site of future Kings of Meath.
See also
- Colum Cille
- Durrow Abbey
- Book of Durrow
- List of abbeys and priories in Ireland (County Offaly)
- List of towns and villages in Ireland
References
- ^ O'Brien, C. (2006), pp 115–20, Stories from a Sacred Landscape, Offaly County Council, Offaly
External links
World Heritage Sites in Ireland Brú na Bóinne Others Skellig Michael • Giant's Causeway (Northern Ireland)
Tentative list The Burren • The Historic City of Dublin • The Céide Fields and North West Mayo Boglands • Western Stone Forts • The Monastic City of Clonmacnoise and its Cultural Landscape • Early Medieval Monastic Sites (Clonmacnoise, Durrow, Glendalough, Inis Cealtra, Kells, and Monasterboice) • The Royal Sites of Ireland: (Cashel, Dún Ailinne, the Hill of Uisneach, the Rathcroghan Complex, and the Tara Complex)
Categories:- Untranslated Irish place names
- Towns and villages in County Offaly
- Ireland geography stubs
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