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Monkstown, County Dublin

Monkstown (Irish: Baile na Manach), historically known as Carrickbrennan (Irish: Carraig Bhraonáin), is a suburb in south Dublin, located in Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown, Ireland. It is on the coast, between Blackrock and Dún Laoghaire while also bordering Sallynoggin and Deansgrange inland.

Monkstown
Baile na Manach
Suburb
Monkstown showing to the left Monkstown Church, Dublin (Church of Ireland) and St. Patricks Church (Roman Catholic) to the right
Monkstown
Location in Dublin
Monkstown
Monkstown (Ireland)
Coordinates: 53°17′38″N 6°09′13″W / 53.2938°N 6.1537°W / 53.2938; -6.1537
CountryIreland
ProvinceLeinster
CountyDún Laoghaire–Rathdown
Government
 • Dáil ÉireannDún Laoghaire
 • EU ParliamentDublin
Population
 (2006)
 • Urban
6,369
Time zoneUTC±0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (IST)
Eircode (Routing Key)
A94
Area code01 (+3531)
Irish Grid ReferenceO221292

The lands of the Carrickbrennan estate form the greater part of the civil parish of Monkstown.

History edit

A church was built at Carrickbrennan (as Monkstown was then known) before the 8th century, and dedicated to Saint Mochonna, bishop of Inispatrick or Holmpatrick by Skerries. The grange of Carrickbrennan, otherwise Monkstown, was granted by the King to the Cistercian monks of Saint Mary's Abbey, Dublin, in 1200. The monks built their grange near to the church, and the village grew up around it. The lands of which it was a part extended as far south as Bulloch harbour on the outskirts of Dalkey, where the monks constructed a fishing harbour protected by a castle.[1]

In 1539, King Henry VIII awarded the Monkstown lands to Sir John Travers, Master of the Ordnance in Ireland. John Travers lived in his Castle at Monkstown from 1557 to his death in 1562 (he is buried in the Carrickbrennan Graveyard) when the property fell to James Eustace 3rd Viscount Baltinglass through his marriage to Mary Travers. In 1580, the Castle was used as a rebellion stronghold, after which it was awarded to Sir Henry Wallop, Vice-Treasurer of Ireland. The lands were later returned to Mary, the widowed Lady Baltinglass, who later married Gerald Alymer. On her death in 1610 the Castle was transferred to the Chevers family through the marriage of Mary Travers's sister Catherine to John Chevers, and the property passed directly to his second son Henry Chevers, who married Catherine, daughter of Sir Richard Fitzwilliam. Henry and Catherine Chevers lived here with their four children (Walter, Thomas, Patrick, Margaret).[citation needed]

Upon the death of Henry in 1640, the castle and lands were passed to Walter Cheevers. Walter and family received a command to vacate Monkstown in 1653 by the Cromwellian Commissioners, and transplanted to Killyan, County Galway. In 1660, Walter Chevers was restored to his estate at Monkstown Castle, until his death in 1678. His death occurred on the 20 December 1678, and he was buried at Mountoun (Monkstown), two days later on the 22nd.[2] The Shivers family of America trace their lineage to Thomas Chevers brother of Walter Chevers of Monkstown, through the Cromwellian warrant, authorized on 26 November 1653 for Captain John Whittey to transport the Thomas Chevers family to America.

Monkstown was later purchased by the Archbishop of Armagh, Michael Boyle, and his son Murrough Boyle, 1st Viscount Blesington enlarged the castle, making it one of the finest residences.[citation needed]

Until about 1800, Monkstown was a rural area of open countryside, dotted here and there with large houses owned by the merchants of Dublin. The Monkstown Church (Church of Ireland) had been built – but was smaller than the present church.

The two small local rivers met in the area now called Pakenham Road. The river known as Micky Briens originated in Sallynoggin. A lake beside Monkstown Castle had one small island. The coastline was ragged and rocky, with a harbour stretching over 100 yards inland at the mouth of the aforementioned rivers, adjacent to the area now occupied by the West Pier. Dún Laoghaire (then called Dunleary, and later Kingstown) was then a small group of houses in the area of the Purty Kitchen, and the present area of Dún Laoghaire was an area of rocky outcrops and later, quarries.

Wednesday, 18 November 1807 a night of disasters in southern Dublin. In a horrific storm, two sailing ships, the Rochdale and the Prince of Wales were blown onto the rocks, one at Seapoint and the other at Blackrock. About 400 lives in total were lost on that night, many of them washed up on the shore at Monkstown. The disaster was one of the factors which led to the building of Dún Laoghaire Harbour. Most of the victims were buried in Carrickbrennan Churchyard.

The building of Dún Laoghaire harbour gave an impetus to the area, and Montpelier Parade was the first of many terraces built in the area. The coming of the railway in 1837 had a much greater impact. Firstly, it changed the topology of the coast, and secondly, it led to Monkstown becoming a commuter suburb of the city of Dublin. Most of the houses along Monkstown Road and the avenues north of that road were constructed over the next 30 years. The maps of 1870 show this phase completed, but the rest of Monkstown consists of mansions surrounded by extensive gardens.

 
Salthill and Monkstown railway station originally built by the Dublin and Kingstown Railway.

For the following 50 years there was little change. The post-war developments of Castle Park, Richmond, Windsor, etc. and the more recent developments of Brook Court, Monkstown Valley, and Carrickbrennan Lawn mean that there is little opportunity for further development.

The diaries of the Rev John Thomas Hynes (1799–1868), a Catholic bishop who retired to Monkstown in 1861–68, provide a valuable insight into daily life in Monkstown in that period. Hynes lived at Bloomwood, Monkstown Avenue (later renamed Carrickbrennan Road), and later moved to Uplands, The Hill, Monkstown. The Hynes Diaries recount such details as the coming of gas lighting, the postal and travel facilities, church affairs, and lots of local gossip. The Hynes diaries are now preserved in Melbourne, but the full text has been made available online.[3]

Documentary references edit

  • Monkstown is first mentioned in 1450; Tenants Cistercians at Carrickbrennan, Villa Monachorum.
  • Carrickbrennan, or "Carigbrenna", features on the 1598 map "A Modern Depiction of Ireland, One of the British Isles"[4] by Abraham Ortelius.
  • Records of the Abbey of the Blessed Virgin Mary 1640.
  • Forfeiting Proprietors under the Cromwellian Settlement 1657.
  • In James Joyce's "The Dead," Gabriel Conroy and his wife Gretta live in Monkstown.

Built heritage edit

 
Monkstown Castle, viewed from the east.
 
Monkstown Castle, viewed from the north.

Monkstown has two old established churches, Saint Mary's Church of Ireland (1831) and Saint Patrick's Catholic Church (1866), both on Carrickbrennan Road. Saint John's Church, located at Gamble's Hill, was originally constructed as a Church of Ireland Church in the 1860s but was renovated and re-consecrated by the Society of Saint Pius X after 1985. Buildings of other religious denominations include the Kingdom Hall of the Jehovah's Witnesses at Monkstown Farm, and the Meeting Hall of the Society of Friends at the junction of Pakenham Road and Carrickbrennan Road. There is also the Friends Burial Ground (Quaker) located at Temple Hill just off Monkstown Road.

Monkstown Castle, which was probably built in the 12th or 13th century, was erected by the monks of the abbey of the Virgin Mary, near Dublin.

Monkstown is also noted for its coastline, which is home to a number of historical buildings of the Victorian, Georgian and Edwardian periods.[citation needed] One of the most notable buildings of the Salthill and Monkstown area is a Martello Tower, located at Seapoint beach.

Transport edit

The DART stations of Seapoint and Salthill and Monkstown serve the area.

Dublin Bus serve the area with routes 7,7a,7n and 63.

An Aircoach service starting in Dalkey links the area with Dublin Airport 24 hours a day.

Sports edit

Monkstown Lawn Tennis Club was founded in 1877. It was the first tennis club in Ireland.

Monkstown Football Club was founded in the village in 1883 before moving to Sandymount in 1901.

Monkstown (Dublin) Boxing Club was founded in 2004, their gym is situated in the newly built Mounttown Community Centre in Fitzgerald Park, in the Monkstown Farm Area.

Farm Utd Football Club was formed in 1935, and uses part of the Monkstown Community Centre as its dressing rooms.

Monkstown also has a Brazilian jiu-jitsu club Ribeiro Jiu Jitsu Ireland. Their gym is situated in the Mounttown Industrial Estate.

A hockey club, Monkstown Hockey Club, is based in the Rathdown School.

Culture edit

Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann, an organisation promoting Irish culture (particularly Irish traditional music), has its headquarters in Monkstown, as does BirdWatch Ireland.

Monkstown had for decades a puppet theatre, the Lambert Puppet Theatre, a family-run business, which for many years hosted an international puppet festival. It also used to appear on national television, for RTÉ. It closed some time after a fire.[citation needed]

There are several references to Monkstown and its wealthy residents in the Ross O'Carroll Kelly series.[citation needed]

Education edit

A multi-denominational primary school, Monkstown Educate Together National School (METNS), a fee-paying junior and senior school Monkstown Park Junior School and CBC Monkstown Park, and Holy Family National School[5] are located in the Monkstown area. A Gaelscoil is also located in Monkstown, Scoil Lorcáin, teaching all classes through Irish.

St. Oliver Plunkett N.S is a school for children with a Specific Learning Difficulty (SLD). This school caters for children from a wide catchment area.[citation needed]

 
A rugby match at CBC Monkstown Park

Christian Brother's College is based on the old estate of Charles Haliday at Monkstown Park. It consists of two schools; an Independent preparatory school with 200 students and a fee-paying secondary school with more than 500 students. CBC caters for boys from junior infants through the sixth year. The college recently[when?] completed a major development which saw existing buildings upgraded and a new extension built.[6]

Representation edit

Monkstown is part of the Dáil Éireann constituency of Dún Laoghaire.

Amenities edit

Monkstown has a number of restaurants, cafés and pubs which include Goggins Pub, FXBs The Pub, That's Amore, Bresson Restaurant, Siobheal Nic Eochaidh, and Avoca Food Market. Family-owned shops and businesses in the area include Hewett Newsagents, Cosgrove's Pharmacy and the Carrick Hoover Centre.[citation needed]

People edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Monkstown". logainm.ie. Placenames Database of Ireland. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  2. ^ Funeral Certificate.
  3. ^ Hynes, Diaries (PDF), AU: Unisa
  4. ^ "A Modern Depiction of Ireland, One of the British Isles — Viewer — World Digital Library". www.wdl.org.
  5. ^ Holy Family national school, IE: Scoil net.
  6. ^ Christian Brother's College, IE, retrieved 7 February 2008
  7. ^ Paul Byrne (25 June 2007). "Cathy's no wallflower". Irish Independent. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  8. ^ a b c Roche, Tom; Finlay, Ken (2003), Blackrock, Dun Laoghaire and Dalkey (Along the coast from Booterstown to Killiney).
  9. ^ "Alfred Gresham Jones", The Directory of Irish Architects.
  10. ^ "Cillian Murphy shells out €1.7m on home in Monkstown - Independent.ie".
  11. ^ Lyons, Madeleine (16 September 2015). "Ryan Tubridy moves on from €1.275m Monkstown home: Presenter is downsizing from a restored Victorian he bought two years ago". The Irish Times. Retrieved 16 September 2015. Meanwhile he says he plans to stay in the area close to the sea, and the Dart. Will he go for something completely different next time around? 'No, I would definitely go for old school with a modern twist again, but ... I'd prefer to find something where someone else has been kind enough to do all the work already'.
  12. ^ Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921, London: John Murray, 1926; Vol. 2, p. 67

External links edit

  • "Monkstown Village"
  • Monkstown Parish Maps
  • Monkstown Castle at Megalithic Ireland
  • Monkstown Castle, Co. Dublin at National Monuments Service

monkstown, county, dublin, monkstown, irish, baile, manach, historically, known, carrickbrennan, irish, carraig, bhraonáin, suburb, south, dublin, located, dún, laoghaire, rathdown, ireland, coast, between, blackrock, dún, laoghaire, while, also, bordering, sa. Monkstown Irish Baile na Manach historically known as Carrickbrennan Irish Carraig Bhraonain is a suburb in south Dublin located in Dun Laoghaire Rathdown Ireland It is on the coast between Blackrock and Dun Laoghaire while also bordering Sallynoggin and Deansgrange inland Monkstown Baile na ManachSuburbMonkstown showing to the left Monkstown Church Dublin Church of Ireland and St Patricks Church Roman Catholic to the rightMonkstownLocation in DublinShow map of DublinMonkstownMonkstown Ireland Show map of IrelandCoordinates 53 17 38 N 6 09 13 W 53 2938 N 6 1537 W 53 2938 6 1537CountryIrelandProvinceLeinsterCountyDun Laoghaire RathdownGovernment Dail EireannDun Laoghaire EU ParliamentDublinPopulation 2006 Urban6 369Time zoneUTC 0 WET Summer DST UTC 1 IST Eircode Routing Key A94Area code01 3531 Irish Grid ReferenceO221292The lands of the Carrickbrennan estate form the greater part of the civil parish of Monkstown Contents 1 History 1 1 Documentary references 2 Built heritage 3 Transport 4 Sports 5 Culture 6 Education 7 Representation 8 Amenities 9 People 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory editA church was built at Carrickbrennan as Monkstown was then known before the 8th century and dedicated to Saint Mochonna bishop of Inispatrick or Holmpatrick by Skerries The grange of Carrickbrennan otherwise Monkstown was granted by the King to the Cistercian monks of Saint Mary s Abbey Dublin in 1200 The monks built their grange near to the church and the village grew up around it The lands of which it was a part extended as far south as Bulloch harbour on the outskirts of Dalkey where the monks constructed a fishing harbour protected by a castle 1 In 1539 King Henry VIII awarded the Monkstown lands to Sir John Travers Master of the Ordnance in Ireland John Travers lived in his Castle at Monkstown from 1557 to his death in 1562 he is buried in the Carrickbrennan Graveyard when the property fell to James Eustace 3rd Viscount Baltinglass through his marriage to Mary Travers In 1580 the Castle was used as a rebellion stronghold after which it was awarded to Sir Henry Wallop Vice Treasurer of Ireland The lands were later returned to Mary the widowed Lady Baltinglass who later married Gerald Alymer On her death in 1610 the Castle was transferred to the Chevers family through the marriage of Mary Travers s sister Catherine to John Chevers and the property passed directly to his second son Henry Chevers who married Catherine daughter of Sir Richard Fitzwilliam Henry and Catherine Chevers lived here with their four children Walter Thomas Patrick Margaret citation needed Upon the death of Henry in 1640 the castle and lands were passed to Walter Cheevers Walter and family received a command to vacate Monkstown in 1653 by the Cromwellian Commissioners and transplanted to Killyan County Galway In 1660 Walter Chevers was restored to his estate at Monkstown Castle until his death in 1678 His death occurred on the 20 December 1678 and he was buried at Mountoun Monkstown two days later on the 22nd 2 The Shivers family of America trace their lineage to Thomas Chevers brother of Walter Chevers of Monkstown through the Cromwellian warrant authorized on 26 November 1653 for Captain John Whittey to transport the Thomas Chevers family to America Monkstown was later purchased by the Archbishop of Armagh Michael Boyle and his son Murrough Boyle 1st Viscount Blesington enlarged the castle making it one of the finest residences citation needed Until about 1800 Monkstown was a rural area of open countryside dotted here and there with large houses owned by the merchants of Dublin The Monkstown Church Church of Ireland had been built but was smaller than the present church The two small local rivers met in the area now called Pakenham Road The river known as Micky Briens originated in Sallynoggin A lake beside Monkstown Castle had one small island The coastline was ragged and rocky with a harbour stretching over 100 yards inland at the mouth of the aforementioned rivers adjacent to the area now occupied by the West Pier Dun Laoghaire then called Dunleary and later Kingstown was then a small group of houses in the area of the Purty Kitchen and the present area of Dun Laoghaire was an area of rocky outcrops and later quarries Wednesday 18 November 1807 a night of disasters in southern Dublin In a horrific storm two sailing ships the Rochdale and the Prince of Wales were blown onto the rocks one at Seapoint and the other at Blackrock About 400 lives in total were lost on that night many of them washed up on the shore at Monkstown The disaster was one of the factors which led to the building of Dun Laoghaire Harbour Most of the victims were buried in Carrickbrennan Churchyard The building of Dun Laoghaire harbour gave an impetus to the area and Montpelier Parade was the first of many terraces built in the area The coming of the railway in 1837 had a much greater impact Firstly it changed the topology of the coast and secondly it led to Monkstown becoming a commuter suburb of the city of Dublin Most of the houses along Monkstown Road and the avenues north of that road were constructed over the next 30 years The maps of 1870 show this phase completed but the rest of Monkstown consists of mansions surrounded by extensive gardens nbsp Salthill and Monkstown railway station originally built by the Dublin and Kingstown Railway For the following 50 years there was little change The post war developments of Castle Park Richmond Windsor etc and the more recent developments of Brook Court Monkstown Valley and Carrickbrennan Lawn mean that there is little opportunity for further development The diaries of the Rev John Thomas Hynes 1799 1868 a Catholic bishop who retired to Monkstown in 1861 68 provide a valuable insight into daily life in Monkstown in that period Hynes lived at Bloomwood Monkstown Avenue later renamed Carrickbrennan Road and later moved to Uplands The Hill Monkstown The Hynes Diaries recount such details as the coming of gas lighting the postal and travel facilities church affairs and lots of local gossip The Hynes diaries are now preserved in Melbourne but the full text has been made available online 3 Documentary references edit Monkstown is first mentioned in 1450 Tenants Cistercians at Carrickbrennan Villa Monachorum Carrickbrennan or Carigbrenna features on the 1598 map A Modern Depiction of Ireland One of the British Isles 4 by Abraham Ortelius Records of the Abbey of the Blessed Virgin Mary 1640 Forfeiting Proprietors under the Cromwellian Settlement 1657 In James Joyce s The Dead Gabriel Conroy and his wife Gretta live in Monkstown Built heritage edit nbsp Monkstown Castle viewed from the east nbsp Monkstown Castle viewed from the north Monkstown has two old established churches Saint Mary s Church of Ireland 1831 and Saint Patrick s Catholic Church 1866 both on Carrickbrennan Road Saint John s Church located at Gamble s Hill was originally constructed as a Church of Ireland Church in the 1860s but was renovated and re consecrated by the Society of Saint Pius X after 1985 Buildings of other religious denominations include the Kingdom Hall of the Jehovah s Witnesses at Monkstown Farm and the Meeting Hall of the Society of Friends at the junction of Pakenham Road and Carrickbrennan Road There is also the Friends Burial Ground Quaker located at Temple Hill just off Monkstown Road Monkstown Castle which was probably built in the 12th or 13th century was erected by the monks of the abbey of the Virgin Mary near Dublin Monkstown is also noted for its coastline which is home to a number of historical buildings of the Victorian Georgian and Edwardian periods citation needed One of the most notable buildings of the Salthill and Monkstown area is a Martello Tower located at Seapoint beach Transport editThe DART stations of Seapoint and Salthill and Monkstown serve the area Dublin Bus serve the area with routes 7 7a 7n and 63 An Aircoach service starting in Dalkey links the area with Dublin Airport 24 hours a day Sports editMonkstown Lawn Tennis Club was founded in 1877 It was the first tennis club in Ireland Monkstown Football Club was founded in the village in 1883 before moving to Sandymount in 1901 Monkstown Dublin Boxing Club was founded in 2004 their gym is situated in the newly built Mounttown Community Centre in Fitzgerald Park in the Monkstown Farm Area Farm Utd Football Club was formed in 1935 and uses part of the Monkstown Community Centre as its dressing rooms Monkstown also has a Brazilian jiu jitsu club Ribeiro Jiu Jitsu Ireland Their gym is situated in the Mounttown Industrial Estate A hockey club Monkstown Hockey Club is based in the Rathdown School Culture editComhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann an organisation promoting Irish culture particularly Irish traditional music has its headquarters in Monkstown as does BirdWatch Ireland Monkstown had for decades a puppet theatre the Lambert Puppet Theatre a family run business which for many years hosted an international puppet festival It also used to appear on national television for RTE It closed some time after a fire citation needed There are several references to Monkstown and its wealthy residents in the Ross O Carroll Kelly series citation needed Education editA multi denominational primary school Monkstown Educate Together National School METNS a fee paying junior and senior school Monkstown Park Junior School and CBC Monkstown Park and Holy Family National School 5 are located in the Monkstown area A Gaelscoil is also located in Monkstown Scoil Lorcain teaching all classes through Irish St Oliver Plunkett N S is a school for children with a Specific Learning Difficulty SLD This school caters for children from a wide catchment area citation needed nbsp A rugby match at CBC Monkstown ParkChristian Brother s College is based on the old estate of Charles Haliday at Monkstown Park It consists of two schools an Independent preparatory school with 200 students and a fee paying secondary school with more than 500 students CBC caters for boys from junior infants through the sixth year The college recently when completed a major development which saw existing buildings upgraded and a new extension built 6 Representation editMonkstown is part of the Dail Eireann constituency of Dun Laoghaire Amenities editMonkstown has a number of restaurants cafes and pubs which include Goggins Pub FXBs The Pub That s Amore Bresson Restaurant Siobheal Nic Eochaidh and Avoca Food Market Family owned shops and businesses in the area include Hewett Newsagents Cosgrove s Pharmacy and the Carrick Hoover Centre citation needed People editD J Carey hurler citation needed Nuala Carey weather presenter citation needed Tim Pat Coogan writer citation needed Cathy Davey Irish singer songwriter grew up in Monkstown 7 Chris de Burgh singer songwriter citation needed Helen Dillon b 1940 gardener who moved from Ranelagh in 2016 citation needed The Edge guitarist of U2 citation needed Howard Grubb 1844 31 was a designer and maker of telescopes He lived at De Vesci Terrace and from 1925 at 13 Longford Terrace which now bears a plaque 8 Alfred Gresham Jones 1824 1913 Irish architect He lived at Queen s Park House at Clifton Lodge on Seafield Ave at Villa Carlotta on Queen s Park and then emigrated to Australia 9 Marian Keyes Irish author and radio presenter spent some of her upbringing in the suburb Paul McGuinness manager of U2 citation needed Charles Mitchel first RTE television newsreader citation needed Christy Moore singer songwriter citation needed Cillian Murphy actor 10 Blathnaid Ni Chofaigh TV presenter citation needed Sinead O Connor singer songwriter citation needed Peadar O Donnell 1893 1986 Irish socialist republican revolutionary citation needed John O Shea humanitarian citation needed William Parsons 3rd Earl of Rosse 1800 64 lived at 1 Eaton Place and built the world s largest telescope in 1845 which remained the world s largest for the rest of the century 8 page needed Richard Pigott 1835 1889 lived at 7 De Vesci Terrace He was an Irish journalist best known for selling the Pigott forgeries 8 Ryan Tubridy presenter of The Late Late Show 11 Anthony Upton 1656 1718 judge of the Court of Common Pleas Ireland lived at Mountown House in present day Monkstown 12 Eve Watkinson 1909 1999 stage film and television actress citation needed See also editList of towns and villages in IrelandReferences edit Monkstown logainm ie Placenames Database of Ireland Retrieved 7 October 2017 Funeral Certificate Hynes Diaries PDF AU Unisa A Modern Depiction of Ireland One of the British Isles Viewer World Digital Library www wdl org Holy Family national school IE Scoil net Christian Brother s College IE retrieved 7 February 2008 Paul Byrne 25 June 2007 Cathy s no wallflower Irish Independent Retrieved 19 April 2022 a b c Roche Tom Finlay Ken 2003 Blackrock Dun Laoghaire and Dalkey Along the coast from Booterstown to Killiney Alfred Gresham Jones The Directory of Irish Architects Cillian Murphy shells out 1 7m on home in Monkstown Independent ie Lyons Madeleine 16 September 2015 Ryan Tubridy moves on from 1 275m Monkstown home Presenter is downsizing from a restored Victorian he bought two years ago The Irish Times Retrieved 16 September 2015 Meanwhile he says he plans to stay in the area close to the sea and the Dart Will he go for something completely different next time around No I would definitely go for old school with a modern twist again but I d prefer to find something where someone else has been kind enough to do all the work already Ball F Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221 1921 London John Murray 1926 Vol 2 p 67External links edit Monkstown Village Monkstown Parish Maps Monkstown Castle at Megalithic Ireland Monkstown Castle Co Dublin at National Monuments Service Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monkstown County Dublin amp oldid 1214730533 Castle, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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