Independent Articles and Advice
Login | Register
Finance | Life | Recreation | Technology | Travel | Shopping | Odds & Ends
Top Writers | Write For Us


PRINT |  FULL TEXT PAGES:  1 2 3 4
A History Lovers Guide to Cork 
 
by Mark R. Whittington August 30, 2005

Blarney Castle

Blarney Castle, just five kilometers from Cork City, is the site of the famous Blarney Stone, the legend of which suggests that kissing it will grant one the gift of eloquence. The stone itself is set in the wall below the battlements and to kiss it, one has to lean backwards while holding on to an iron railing from the parapet walk. Be sure to get there early before the tour busses.

The current Blarney Castle is the third to have been erected on this site. The first, built in the tenth century, was a wooden fortress. Around 1210 A.D. this was replaced by a stone castle that had the entrance some twenty feet above the ground on the north face. This building was demolished for foundations. In 1446 the third castle was built by Dermot McCarthy, King of Munster of which the keep still remains standing. The lower walls are fifteen feet, built with an angle tower by the McCarthys of Muskerry. It was Cormac McCarthy who, as legend states, was rewarded part of Scotland’s Stone of Scone by King of Scots Robert the Bruce in gratitude for his help at the Battle of Bannockburn. This stone became the Blarney Stone, so says the story.

During Elizabeth I’s time, the Earl of Leicester was commanded to take possession of the castle. But the McCarthy who held Blarney at the time managed to delay the Earl long enough so that when he had to report to his Queen that the castle was yet untaken, Elizabeth referred to the report as ‘blarney.’ Thus the term means to deceive without offending.

The castle was taken by Cromwell’s men. Some decades later, it came into the possession of Sir James St. John Jefferyes, Governor of Cork. During the reign of Queen Anne, Sir James St. John Jefferyes built a Georgian gothic house up against the keep of the castle as was then the custom all over IrelanD. At the same time the Jefferyes family laid out a landscape garden known as the Rock Close with a remarkable collection of massive boulders and rocks arranged around what seemed to have been druid remains from pre-historic times. Certainly, many of the yew trees and evergreen oaks are extremely ancient. In 1820 the house was destroyed in a fire and the wings now form a picturesque adjunct to the keep, recently in the 1980s rearranged to give a better view of the keep. The Jefferyes intermarried in January 1846 with the Colthurst family. Lady Colthurst decided to build the new castle in Scottish baronial style south of the present keep, which was completed in 1874 and has been the family home ever since. There are conducted tours of the house during the summer season.

One of the interesting features of Rock Close is a rock that looks like the witch and her hat. There are also wishing steps which in order to obtain one's wish must be negotiated down and up backwards with one's eyes shut! They lead down to two dolmens, one of which used to rock if pushed in the present owner's father's lifetime. They are said to have druidic connotations. There is a sacrificial stone situated so when that the first rays of the sun shines through gaps in the surrounding rocks, it is the appointed time for the sacrifice.

PREV PAGE 1 2 3 4 NEXT PAGE

 




Home  |  Write For Us  |  FAQ  |  Copyright Policy  |  Disclaimer  |  Link to Us  |  About  |  Contact

© 2005 GoogoBits.com. All Rights Reserved.