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Doon, County Limerick

Doon
Dún Bleisce
Town
Aerial view of Doon
Aerial view of Doon
Doon is located in Ireland
Doon
Doon
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°36′16″N 8°14′55″W / 52.604338°N 8.248479°W / 52.604338; -8.248479Coordinates: 52°36′16″N 8°14′55″W / 52.604338°N 8.248479°W / 52.604338; -8.248479
Country Ireland
Province Munster
County County Limerick
Dáil Éireann Limerick
EU Parliament South
Elevation 150 m (490 ft)
Population (2011)
 • Urban 1,342
Website www.dunbleisce.com

Doon (Irish: Dún Bleisce) is a village in east County Limerick, Ireland, close to the border of County Tipperary. It is also a civil parish in the historic barony of Coonagh. and is an ecclesiastical parish in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly.

The name Doon, deriving from the common Irish place name term Dún meaning "fort", can also be found as the name of various different townlands in Ireland.

In Irish Dún Bleisce. Dún means fortification and the Ordnance Survey map of the area records eight ring forts. The main such ring fort is located behind the Church of Ireland Church outside the village. The Bleisce part is more difficult to explain. Speculation on the origin of the name revolves around three theories. The first theory is that the name is derived from a stream – in Irish fleisc - which flows through the village. The second is that Bleisc was the name of a swine herder for a local chieftain. The third is that Bleisc was "a woman of ill repute", a harlot whose "dún" was a favourite haunt of soldiers of the Crown.

The first mention of the name Dún Bleisce was in the Annals of Inisfallen in 774 and for hundreds of years the village was known by this name. In 2003, the Placename Commission recommended that the official translation for Doon be changed to An Dún as it "was the appropriate Irish name for the village". After a sustained campaign by locals which included a motion being adopted by Limerick County Council in November 2006 to request the name be changed back, the locals got their wish. The Minister for Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs, Eamon O'Cuiv, approved the reversion saying that the alternative Dún Bleisce had an "attested historical basis".


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