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Carlow, Ireland

Carlow
Ceatharlach
Town
Carlow Cathedral
Carlow Cathedral
Coat of arms of Carlow
Coat of arms
Carlow is located in Ireland
Carlow
Carlow
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°49′50″N 6°55′54″W / 52.8306°N 6.9317°W / 52.8306; -6.9317Coordinates: 52°49′50″N 6°55′54″W / 52.8306°N 6.9317°W / 52.8306; -6.9317
Country Ireland
Province Leinster
County County Carlow
Dáil Éireann Carlow–Kilkenny
Elevation 57 m (187 ft)
 • Rank 14th
Eircode (Routing Key) R93
Irish Grid Reference S724771
Website www.carlow.ie

Carlow (/ˈkɑːr.l/; Irish: Ceatharlach) is the county town of County Carlow, Ireland, in the south-east of Ireland, 84 km from Dublin. At the 2016 census, it had a combined urban and rural population of 24,272. The county of Carlow has a population of 56,932.

The Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 included the town entirely in County Carlow. The settlement of Carlow is thousands of years old and pre-dates written Irish history. The town has played a major role in Irish history, serving as the capital of the country in the 14th century.

The name is an anglicisation of the Irish Ceatharlach. Historically, it was anglicised as Caherlagh,Caterlagh and Catherlagh, which are closer to the Irish spelling. According to logainm.ie, the first part of the name derives from the Old Irish word cethrae ("animals, cattle, herds, flocks"), which is related to ceathar ("four") and therefore signified "four-legged". The second part of the name is the ending -lach.

Some believe that the name should be Ceatharloch (meaning "quadruple lake"), since ceathar means "four" and loch means "lake". It is directly translated as "Four lakes", although, there is seemingly no evidence to suggest that these lakes ever existed in this area.

The Carlow county area has been settled for thousands of years, evidence of human occupation extends back thousands of years, the most notable and dramatic prehistoric site being the Browneshill Dolmen – a megalithic portal tomb just outside Carlow town.

Now part of the diocese of Kildare and Leighlin, several Early Christian settlements are still in evidence today around the county. St Mullin's monastery is believed to have been established around the 7th century, the ruins of which are still in evidence today. Old Leighlin was the site of one of the largest monastic settlements in Ireland and the location for a church synod in 630 AD which determined the date of Easter. St Comhgall built a monastery in the Carlow area in the 6th century, an old church building and burial ground survive today at Castle Hill known as Mary's Abbey. Carlow was an Irish stronghold for agriculture in the early 1800s which earned the county the nickname of the scallion eaters. Famine wiped out a lot of the population, cutting it in half.


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