Jump to content

Draft:Kilcoe Castle

Coordinates: 51°32′25″N 9°24′52″W / 51.54024°N 9.41442°W / 51.54024; -9.41442
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kilcoe Castle
View from the opposite side of the Roaringwater Bay
TypeMedieval castle
Coordinates51°32′25″N 9°24′52″W / 51.54024°N 9.41442°W / 51.54024; -9.41442
AreaCounty Cork, Ireland
Built1458[1]
Built forMacCarthys of Muskerry
Architectural style(s)tower house
Governing bodyOn private land
Kilcoe Castle is located in Ireland
Kilcoe Castle
Kilcoe Castle in Ireland

Kilcoe Castle is a 15th-century coastal tower house located on a 2-acre island[2] called Mannin Beg[3] in the Kilcoe townland in Roaringwater Bay in West Cork, Ireland.

Design

[edit]

The structure, similarly to many tower houses of the Irish clans involved in maritime and fishing trade, is built directly on the coastline, with parts of rock smoothened and made into a slipway, possibly to enable the hauling up of boats, fishnets and supplies.[4] The building is a rectangular, four-storey tower 65 feet in height,[5] with another 85-high,[6] seven-story tower of smaller footage attached at one corner. The design with a flanking tower is characteristic of West Cork castles. In steep stair steps there are slits allowing the castle defenders to poke intruders with spears,[1] a common feature in medieval castles. Walls are between three and seven feet thick.[1]

There are passages in the walls between the larger tower and the smaller one, enabling easier access to individual rooms. Two of these rooms would serve as prisons, with the upper one with windows for more valuable prisoners and hostages, and the lower dark one for the more common criminals. The arrangement with two prison rooms, and the fact that the dungeon was on one of the upper floors rather than underground, may have been unique to this castle.[7][4] The towers are furnished with crenellations typical of Irish tower houses. The structure is surrounded by a stone wall which offered privacy and protection against the waves and intruders. The wall is punctured by arrow loops, and topped with a walkway. It is the largest castle in the Roaringwater Bay, and the design with an additional corner tower distinguishes it from other tower houses in the area.[3]

History

[edit]

The castle was built in 1458 by the Clan Dermod branch of the MacCarthys.[4][8] In 1603, during a lengthy siege, it was defended by Fineen O'Driscoll's son Conchobhar (Connor)[9] and ultimately surrendered to the English forces of George Carew[10] led by Captain George Flower.[2] The legend has it the invaders threw the defenders off the top.[7][11] It was the last castle to fall in Munster (and more specifically in the former barony of Carbery[9]) after the defeat at Kinsale. After the surrender, the castle fell into disrepair, and it had not been until 1966 when the farmer who owned the land where the castle was situated registered it. In 1972 it was sold to Edward Samuel, an architect based in London.[12][7]

Modern times

[edit]

Since the late 1970s, a planning permission existed, obtained by Samuel, to restore the building for residential use. He also built a bridge linking the castle's island with the mainland.[2]

In 1996, the castle was offered for sale. Despite some protests against giving it to private ownership,[13] in 1997 the land and the castle were purchased for 150,000 British pounds by the English actor Jeremy Irons who had already lived in a farmhouse in the vicinity with his wife Sinéad Cusack. They lodged a new planning permission application in February 1998,[14] with the plan to spend over 1 million pounds on restoration. Restoration plans included store room on the ground floor;[14] dormitory-type design on the first floor; a kitchen, living room, and dining room on the third; a chapel and a library on the fourth; and an en-suite bedroom on the fifth. In place of a traditional septic tank, a peat-based biocycle system was installed. The main tower's third floor was made into a large, two-storey living space, a solar, with plenty of daylight. [5] The tower's turret on floor seven was also restored. Irons took a year off acting to focus on the project, and planned to offer the castle as a retreat to writers, historians and archeologists.[6] He has also made castle tours available for fundraising initiatives.[15]

The restoration was done in a way to minimize the disturbance to the fabric of the building, for example no holes were drilled in the external masonry. Lime mortar and harling finish was put on the outside of the towers. Additional parts of walls and buildings, for example a cottage based on originally preserved foundations, were built.[16] Supervision, designs, and planning were carried out by a team of experts from the UK, Ireland, and France;[14] and for the work itself Irons hired local people, often ones who randomly showed up at his door.[5] Stone for restoration was brought in from Castlehaven, Co. Cork[5] and Liscannor, Co. Clare, and a crane to support the works from France.[10] The entire restoration, whose leading theme Irons himself described as a "jazz riff on the medieval"[1] took 6 years to complete.[5]

Color

[edit]

There were contentions initially as to the color of the facade, but ultimately it was decided on peach-colored mixture of ferrous sulphate used in iron fillings with limewash which was expected to oxidize gracefully and retain "terra-cotta orange" color.[17] The owner himself referred to the color as "ochre", protested calling it "pink", [16] and dismissed the occasional criticism.[18][5] Additionally, there is evidence that most medieval castles were originally indeed rendered on the outside, and painted using various available dyes, which addresses the concerns of critics who claimed the castle should have retained its gray stone facade.[19]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Devlin, Martina (22 November 2008). "Will of Irons". Irish Independent.
  2. ^ a b c "Where man's home can be his castle...". Irish Independent. 4 October 1996.
  3. ^ a b Hedderman, Zara (12 April 2023). "Explore the pink castle in West Cork that's home to an Academy Award winner and his family". The Journal. Retrieved 8 October 2024.
  4. ^ a b c Heritage Castles of County Cork. Heritage Unit of Cork County Council. 2017. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-9935969-3-3.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Kamp, David. "How Jeremy Irons Rescued and Restored a 15th-Century Irish Castle". Vanity Fair. No. October 2017.
  6. ^ a b Cassidy, Eddie (28 February 1998). "Irons plans a year off acting to supervise restoration of castle". Irish Examiner.
  7. ^ a b c "Kilcoe, one of West Cork's finest castles, to be sold". The Southern Star. 8 February 1997.
  8. ^ "Kilcoe Castle". Castles.nl.
  9. ^ a b O'Donovan, Peadar (21 January 1984). "The O'Driscolls - to fore on land and sea". The Southern Star.
  10. ^ a b "Another excellent Mizen Journal". The Southern Star. 29 April 2000.
  11. ^ Daly, Eugene (12 January 2002). "Tragedy and heroism in Roaring Water Bay". The Southern Star.
  12. ^ "Life piles of the rich and famous: why a celeb's home is their castle". Irish Independent. 26 May 2001.
  13. ^ "Kilcoe Castle - a plea". The Southern Star. 19 April 1997.
  14. ^ a b c "Kilcoe Castle plans put before County Council". The Southern Star. 28 February 1998.
  15. ^ "Fancy a tour of Kilcoe Castle". The Southern Star. 20 December 2003.
  16. ^ a b Barlow, Helen (27 November 2004). "Jeremy and the giant peach". Irish Examiner.
  17. ^ Cassidy, Eddie (23 May 2001). "Jeremy's 15th century castle is just a peach". Irish Examiner.
  18. ^ Myers, Kevin (3 June 2001). "Jeremy Iron's pink erection". The Telegraph.
  19. ^ "Kilcoe Castle – A Magnificent Reconstruction". Roaringwater Journal. 10 May 2020. Retrieved 8 October 2024.