Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Dunguaire Castle

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Type
  
tower house

Client
  
Hynes Clan

Phone
  
+353 61 711 200

Completed
  
16th Century

Province
  
Connacht

Dunguaire Castle

Location
  
Kinvara, County Galway, Ireland

Address
  
Dungory East, Kinvarra, Co. Galway, Ireland

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–4:30PMWednesday10AM–4:30PMThursday10AM–4:30PMFriday10AM–4:30PMSaturday10AM–4:30PMSunday10AM–4:30PMMonday10AM–4:30PMTuesday10AM–4:30PM

Similar
  
Galway Bay, The Burren, Bunratty Castle, Cliffs of Moher, Poulnabrone dolmen

Dunguaire castle kinvara co galway ireland


Dunguaire Castle (Irish: Dún Guaire) is a 16th-century tower house on the southeastern shore of Galway Bay in County Galway, Ireland, near Kinvara (also spelled Kinvarra). The name derives from the Dun of King Guaire, the legendary king of Connacht. The castle's 75-foot (23 m) tower and its defensive wall have been restored, and the grounds are open to tourists during the summer.

Contents

History

The 19th century Gaelic scholar John O'Donovan states in his Ordnance Survey letters for County Galway and his book The Genealogies, Tribes and Customs of the Hy-Fiachrach that Dunguaire was built by the Ó hEidhin clan, chiefs of Coill Ua bhFiachrach, the district around Kinvara, and also of Uí Fiachrach Aidhne an area coextensive with the diocese of Kilmacduagh covering the part of county County Galway between the Burren and Galway Bay to the west and Slieve Aughty to the east.

Dunguaire Castle was used in the 1969 Walt Disney movie Guns in the Heather, featuring Kurt Russell, in which the castle was featured as Boyne Castle. It was also the Scottish castle home of the main character in the 1979 film North Sea Hijack.

Legends

Another regionally well known legend is the "Road of the Dishes" (Bothar na Mias), involving King Guaire and St. Colman of Kilmacduagh.

References

Dunguaire Castle Wikipedia