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drogheda town fortifications and churches

Drogheda Town Fortifications and Churches

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Drogheda
Louth
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The town was founded by the Norse in 911, and the Normans made it into one of their important strongholds. A number of Parliaments met here in the Middle Ages. The saddest episode in the town's history was when Cromwell took the town in 1649, massacred 2,000 of its defenders, and sent many captives from it to the Barbadoes. It surrendered to King William after the Battle of the Boyne. There are still a number of medieval remains in the town.
Magadlene Tower:
This is the only remnant of an old Dominican church founded in 1224 by Luke Netterville, Archbishop of Armagh, and dedicated to St. Mary Magdalene. It was in this priory that Richard II received the submission of four Irish kings in 1394. The tower was probably inserted in the 15th century at the place where nave and transepts met. Further south, in Old Abbey Lane off West Street, are the shabby remains of another medieval abbey, that of the Augustinians which was founded in 1206, though much of the present building is probably 15th century in date.
St.
Largeness Gate and Town Fortifications:
This fine building, consisting of two round towers and connecting wall, is a barbican or advance fortification outside the walls of the town. It dates to the 13th century, and gets its name from a friary dedicated to St. Laurence which stood nearby inside the walls, but which has since disappeared. It is the finest of its type remaining in Ireland. The areas of the town both north and south of the river were separately walled in the 13th century. Parts of the town walls on the south side of the river can be seen in the grounds of St. Mary's Church of Ireland church. Not far away is Millmount Fort, possibly originally a Passage-tomb like Newgrange, fortified as a motte in the 12th century, and used as a fortification again around 1800 (recently restored). Near by is the museum of the Old Drogheda Society.
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