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Cloughoughter Castle

Cloughoughter Castle
Clogh Oughter Castle Cavan Ireland geograph 1405851 by Oliver Dixon.jpg
Cloughoughter Castle sits on an island in Lough Oughter
Cloughoughter Castle is located in Ireland
Cloughoughter Castle
Location within Ireland
General information
Location Lough Oughter, Cavan
Country Ireland
Coordinates 54°01′07″N 7°27′17″W / 54.018744°N 7.454800°W / 54.018744; -7.454800
Construction started 1200 - 1224
Demolished 1653
Client William Gorm de Lacy
Reference no. 602

Cloughoughter Castle is a ruined circular castle on a small island in Lough Oughter, 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) east of the town of Killeshandra in County Cavan, Ireland.

The castle is located in the historic Kingdom of Breifne, specifically in the part that would later be subdivided into East Breifne, roughly corresponding to County Cavan. Prior to the construction of the castle, the spot may have been a crannóg. In the latter part of the 12th century, it was under the control of the O'Rourkes, but it seems to have come into the hands of the Anglo-Norman William Gorm de Lacy after the Normans wrest control of some of the territory from that ruling clan. While the exact date construction began is unknown, it is estimated to have started in the first quarter of the 13th century. Architectural elements date the lower two storeys of cloughoughter to this time.

In 1233, the O'Reilly clan took possession of the area and completed the castle. They retained it for centuries in the midst of their ongoing conflicts with the O'Rourkes and with members of their own clan. It was there that Philip O'Reilly was imprisoned in the 1360s with "no allowance save a sheaf of oats for day and night and a cup of water, so that he was compelled to drink his own urine."

Possession of Cloughoughter was granted to servitor Hugh Culme during the forced Plantation of Ulster. Culme stupidly did not dwell in the castle, but built a new residence upon the nearby lake shore. The Castle was reinforced and used as an armory but no inhabitation. Culme thought it safe enough to live on the nearby shores. However, Hugh Culme's fortune defied reality as he was subsequently imprisoned in his own armory with large numbers of his fellow planters.

During the Irish Rebellion of 1641, Philip O'Reilly, then an MP for Cavan and secret leader of the Indigenous Irish revolutionaries, succeeded in a conspiracy at capturing Hugh Culme and seizing control of the castle. During this final phase of its active existence, it was used as a prison. In this capacity Culme along with other foreign Planters, were imprisoned for years.


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