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Trim Castle

Trim Castle (Irish: Caisleán Bhaile Átha Troim) is a castle on the south bank of the River Boyne in Trim, County Meath, Ireland, with an area of 30,000 m2.[1][2] Over a period of 30 years, it was built by Hugh de Lacy and his son Walter as the caput of the Lordship of Meath. The Irish Government currently own and are in charge of the care of the castle, through the state agency The Office of Public Works (OPW).

Trim Castle
Trim, County Meath, Ireland
The keep and curtain walls of Trim Castle
Trim Castle
Coordinates53°33′18″N 6°47′23″W / 53.555°N 6.7897°W / 53.555; -6.7897Coordinates: 53°33′18″N 6°47′23″W / 53.555°N 6.7897°W / 53.555; -6.7897
TypeMedieval castle
Site information
OwnerCurrently the Irish Government through the Office of Public Works
ConditionRuin
Site history
Builtfrom the 12th century
Built byHugh de Lacy (keep)
In useOpen to public
Official nameTrim Castle
Reference no.514

The castle is on the List of National Monuments in County Meath.[3]

History

De Lacy

The land area of Meath was owned by the church but was granted to Hugh de Lacy in 1172 by Henry II of England as one of the new administrative areas.[4] De Lacy built a huge ringwork castle defended by a stout double palisade and external ditch on top of the hill. There may also have been further defences around the cliffs fringing the high ground. Part of a stone footed timber gatehouse lies beneath the present stone gate at the west side of the castle.

 
Trim Castle at night.

The site was chosen because it is on raised ground, overlooking a fording point on the River Boyne. The area was an important early medieval ecclesiastical and royal site that was navigable in medieval times by boat up the River Boyne, about 25 miles from the Irish Sea. Trim Castle is referred to in the Norman poem The Song of Dermot and the Earl.

De Lacy left Ireland entrusting the castle to Hugh Tyrrel, baron of Castleknock, one of his chief lieutenants. The ringwork was attacked and burnt by forces of the Gaelic High King of Ireland, Ruaidrí Ua Conchobair; Tyrrel, having appealed in vain for help, was forced to flee. Ua Conchobair soon withdrew and De Lacy, or Raymond FitzGerald, immediately repaired or rebuilt the castle in 1173. After Hugh's death in 1186 his son Walter de Lacy succeeded as Lord of Meath.[5] He continued rebuilding and the castle was completed in the 1220s, most likely in 1224. The year when construction was completed was considered to be 1220 by historians in the 19th century but that is now in dispute.[6]

Geneville and Mortimer

The next phase of the castle's development took place at the end of the 13th century and the beginning of the 14th century; a new great hall (with undercroft and attached solar in a radically altered curtain tower), a new forebuilding, and stables were added to the keep.

On Walter de Lacy's death in 1241 his granddaughter Mathilda ('Maud') inherited the castle. Her second husband was Geoffrey de Geneville (brother of the crusade historian Jean de Joinville),[7] Lord of Vaucouleurs in Champagne, France, and of many lordships in England and Ireland which were to devolve upon his heirs. His son Piers de Geneville (who married Joan de Lusignan) died in 1292 leaving a daughter Joan, who in 1301 married Roger Mortimer (1st Earl of March).[8] Mathilda having died in 1304, in 1308 Geoffrey conveyed his Irish lordships to Roger Mortimer, and entered the priory at St. Mary's in Trim. Joan Mortimer inherited the title Baroness Geneville suo jure when Geoffrey died in 1314.[9]

The castle thereby passed to the Mortimer family who held it until 1425, when the male line died out with Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March.[10] After this the estate passed to Richard of York, son of Edmund's sister Anne Mortimer by Richard of Conisburgh, 3rd Earl of Cambridge.[11] Richard of York was killed at the Battle of Wakefield in 1460, and in 1461 his son, King Edward IV, appointed Germyn Lynch, goldsmith of London, to be his representative at Trim as warden and master worker of the new issues of moneys and coins within the Castles of Dublin and Trim, and the town of Galway.[12]

Later ownership

 
The inside of one of the towers of Trim Castle.

During the 15th century the Irish Parliament met in Trim Castle seven times and a mint operated in the castle. It was at that time the centre of administration for Meath and marked the outer northern boundary of The Pale. In the 16th century it fell into decline and was allowed to deteriorate, but it was refortified during the Irish Confederate Wars in the 1640s. In 1649 after the sacking of Drogheda, the garrison of Trim fled to join other Irish forces and the place was occupied by the army of Oliver Cromwell.

After the wars of the 1680s, the castle was granted to the Wellesley family who held it until Arthur Wellesley (the Duke of Wellington), sold it to the Leslies. In following years it passed via the Encumbered Estates Court into the hands of the Dunsany Plunketts. They left the lands open and from time to time allowed various uses, with part of the Castle Field rented for some years by the Town Council as a municipal dump, and a small meeting hall for the Royal British Legion erected. The Dunsany's held the Castle and surrounds until 1993, when after years of discussion, Lord Dunsany sold the land and buildings to the State, retaining only river access and fishing rights.

Restoration

The Office of Public Works began a major programme of exploratory works and conservation, costing in the region of 4.5 million euro, including partial restoration of the moat and the installation of a protective roof on the keep. The castle was re-opened to the public in 2000.

Structure

 
 
The keep viewed from the undercroft of the Great hall near the River Gate, and a plan

With an area of 30,000 m2, Trim Castle is the largest Cambro-Norman castle in Ireland. The design of the central three-storey keep (also known as a donjon or great tower) is unique for a Norman keep being of cruciform shape, with twenty corners. It was built on the site of the previous large ring work fortification in at least three stages, initially by Hugh de Lacy (c. 1174) and then in 1196 and 1201–5 by Walter de Lacy. The castle interior was partially the subject of archaeological digs, by David Sweetman of the OPW in the 1970s, and more extensively by Alan Hayden in the 1990s.

The surviving curtain walls are predominantly of three phases. The west and north sides of the enceinte are defended by rectangular towers (including the Trim Gate) dating to the 1170s; the Dublin gate was erected in the 1190s or early part of the 13th century; and the remaining wall to the south with its round towers dates to the first two decades of the 13th century. The castle has two main gates. The one in the west side dates to the 1170s and sits on top of a demolished wooden gateway. The upper stories of the stone tower were altered to a semi-octagonal shape, c. 1200. The Dublin Gate in the south wall is a single round towered gate with an external barbican tower. It dates from the 1190s or early 13th century and was the first example of its type to be constructed in Ireland.[citation needed]

 
The Dublin Gate barbican tower at the southern curtain wall (left) and the main tower (right)

Apart from the keep, the main extant structures consist of the following: an early 14th-century three-towered fore work defending the keep entrance and including stables within it (accessed by a stone causeway crossing the partly filled-in ditch of the earlier ringwork); a huge late 13th-century three-aisled great hall (with an under croft beneath its east end opening via a water gate to the river); a stout defensive tower (turned into a solar in the late 13th century at the northern angle of the castle); a smaller aisled hall (added to the east end of the great hall in the 14th or 15th century); a building (possibly the mint) added to the east end of the latter hall; two 15th- or 16th-century stone buildings added inside the town gatehouse, 17th-century buildings (added to the end of the hall range and to the north side of the keep) and a series of lime kilns (one dating from the late 12th century, the remainder from the 18th and 19th centuries).

Access

The Office of Public Works operate a Guide Service at Trim Castle and the grounds are open to the public for self-guiding, on payment of an entry fee. Access to the Castle keep is by guided tour only, an entry fee also applies. In winter, the complex is open only on weekends and bank holidays.

Popular culture

 
Trim and Talbot Castles. Also visible are the Royal Mint, solar and Trim Cathedral

The 1980 movie The Big Red One, starring Lee Marvin and Mark Hamill, was also partially shot in Trim and in particular at Trim Castle.

The castle is noted for the part it played in the filming of Mel Gibson's film Braveheart. The castle was presented as the walled city of York; scenes that took place in London were also filmed here.[13]

Controversies

In 2003 there was a controversy surrounding the decision by the Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government Martin Cullen not to oppose the construction of a five-storey hotel across the road from the castle. The development had been condemned by a local councillor, a senior inspector in An Bord Pleanála (acting in a private capacity, and later choosing to withdraw his appeal lest it be considered a conflict of interest) and heritage bodies, many of whom had been critical of the government's treatment of other heritage sites such as Carrickmines Castle (the ruins of which were excavated partly to allow the completion of a roadway).[14] The hotel was opened in August 2006.

The recent addition of buildings outside the west side of the town has further intruded on the castle remains.

See also

References

  1. ^ Trim Castle, Meath Tourism-Ireland. http://www.meath.ie/Tourism/Heritage/HeritageSites/TrimCastle/
  2. ^ Heritage Ireland: Trim Castle. . Archived from the original on 23 May 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  3. ^ ME01634 MANORLAND (1ST DIVISION) TRIM CASTLE
  4. ^ 'Trim Castle', in R. Butler, Some Notices of the Castle and of the Ecclesiastical Buildings of Trim, led from various authorities (Hodges, Smith & Co., Dublin 1861), pp. 9-134, at pp. 13-14 and pp. 238-39 (Internet Archive).
  5. ^ Butler, Some Notices, pp. 14-17.
  6. ^ ME01634 MANORLAND (1ST DIVISION) TRIM CASTLE
  7. ^ Butler, Some Notices, p. 27 (Internet Archive).
  8. ^ Butler, Some Notices, pp. 29-30.
  9. ^ Butler, Some Notices, pp. 30-33.
  10. ^ Duchas the Heritage Service (ed) (2002). Trim Castle Co. Meath. pp. 20–26. ISBN 0-7557-1282-X. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  11. ^ Butler, Some Notices, pp. 67-72 (Internet Archive).
  12. ^ Butler, Some Notices, pp. 80-82 (Internet Archive).
  13. ^ Trim Castle Cinematic View
  14. ^ Withdrawal of appeal against hotel in Trim to be challenged 7 November 2000

Sources

  • Reeves-Smith, Terrence. 1995. Irish Castles. Belfast: The Appletree Press Ltd.
  • De Breffny, Brian. 1977. Castles of Ireland. London: Thames and Hudson.
  • Salter, Mike. 1993. Castles and Strong Houses of Ireland. Worc.: Folly Publications.
  • Sweetman, David. 1999. The Medieval Castles of Ireland. Cork: The Collins Press.
  • McNeill, Tom. 1997. Castles in Ireland. London: Routledge.

Further reading

  • Sweetman, P. D. (1998), "The development of Trim Castle in the light of recent research", Château Gaillard: Études de castellologie médiévale, XVIII: 223–230, ISBN 9782902685059
  • Hayden, A.R (2011) Trim Castle, Co Meath: Excavations 1995–8. Archaeological Monograph Series: 6. Wordwell (Bray) & Stationery Office (Dublin).

External links

  • Meath Tourism on Trim Castle website by Meath County Council
  • Translation of Grimm's Saga No. 10 The Ghost of Boyne Castle
External 3D model
 
  3D model of Trim Castle (linked at Sketchfab).

trim, castle, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, p. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Trim Castle news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Trim Castle Irish Caislean Bhaile Atha Troim is a castle on the south bank of the River Boyne in Trim County Meath Ireland with an area of 30 000 m2 1 2 Over a period of 30 years it was built by Hugh de Lacy and his son Walter as the caput of the Lordship of Meath The Irish Government currently own and are in charge of the care of the castle through the state agency The Office of Public Works OPW Trim CastleTrim County Meath IrelandThe keep and curtain walls of Trim CastleTrim CastleCoordinates53 33 18 N 6 47 23 W 53 555 N 6 7897 W 53 555 6 7897 Coordinates 53 33 18 N 6 47 23 W 53 555 N 6 7897 W 53 555 6 7897TypeMedieval castleSite informationOwnerCurrently the Irish Government through the Office of Public WorksConditionRuinSite historyBuiltfrom the 12th centuryBuilt byHugh de Lacy keep In useOpen to publicNational Monument of IrelandOfficial nameTrim CastleReference no 514The castle is on the List of National Monuments in County Meath 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 De Lacy 1 2 Geneville and Mortimer 1 3 Later ownership 1 4 Restoration 2 Structure 3 Access 4 Popular culture 5 Controversies 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditDe Lacy Edit The land area of Meath was owned by the church but was granted to Hugh de Lacy in 1172 by Henry II of England as one of the new administrative areas 4 De Lacy built a huge ringwork castle defended by a stout double palisade and external ditch on top of the hill There may also have been further defences around the cliffs fringing the high ground Part of a stone footed timber gatehouse lies beneath the present stone gate at the west side of the castle Trim Castle at night The site was chosen because it is on raised ground overlooking a fording point on the River Boyne The area was an important early medieval ecclesiastical and royal site that was navigable in medieval times by boat up the River Boyne about 25 miles from the Irish Sea Trim Castle is referred to in the Norman poem The Song of Dermot and the Earl De Lacy left Ireland entrusting the castle to Hugh Tyrrel baron of Castleknock one of his chief lieutenants The ringwork was attacked and burnt by forces of the Gaelic High King of Ireland Ruaidri Ua Conchobair Tyrrel having appealed in vain for help was forced to flee Ua Conchobair soon withdrew and De Lacy or Raymond FitzGerald immediately repaired or rebuilt the castle in 1173 After Hugh s death in 1186 his son Walter de Lacy succeeded as Lord of Meath 5 He continued rebuilding and the castle was completed in the 1220s most likely in 1224 The year when construction was completed was considered to be 1220 by historians in the 19th century but that is now in dispute 6 Geneville and Mortimer Edit The next phase of the castle s development took place at the end of the 13th century and the beginning of the 14th century a new great hall with undercroft and attached solar in a radically altered curtain tower a new forebuilding and stables were added to the keep On Walter de Lacy s death in 1241 his granddaughter Mathilda Maud inherited the castle Her second husband was Geoffrey de Geneville brother of the crusade historian Jean de Joinville 7 Lord of Vaucouleurs in Champagne France and of many lordships in England and Ireland which were to devolve upon his heirs His son Piers de Geneville who married Joan de Lusignan died in 1292 leaving a daughter Joan who in 1301 married Roger Mortimer 1st Earl of March 8 Mathilda having died in 1304 in 1308 Geoffrey conveyed his Irish lordships to Roger Mortimer and entered the priory at St Mary s in Trim Joan Mortimer inherited the title Baroness Geneville suo jure when Geoffrey died in 1314 9 The castle thereby passed to the Mortimer family who held it until 1425 when the male line died out with Edmund Mortimer 5th Earl of March 10 After this the estate passed to Richard of York son of Edmund s sister Anne Mortimer by Richard of Conisburgh 3rd Earl of Cambridge 11 Richard of York was killed at the Battle of Wakefield in 1460 and in 1461 his son King Edward IV appointed Germyn Lynch goldsmith of London to be his representative at Trim as warden and master worker of the new issues of moneys and coins within the Castles of Dublin and Trim and the town of Galway 12 Later ownership Edit The inside of one of the towers of Trim Castle During the 15th century the Irish Parliament met in Trim Castle seven times and a mint operated in the castle It was at that time the centre of administration for Meath and marked the outer northern boundary of The Pale In the 16th century it fell into decline and was allowed to deteriorate but it was refortified during the Irish Confederate Wars in the 1640s In 1649 after the sacking of Drogheda the garrison of Trim fled to join other Irish forces and the place was occupied by the army of Oliver Cromwell After the wars of the 1680s the castle was granted to the Wellesley family who held it until Arthur Wellesley the Duke of Wellington sold it to the Leslies In following years it passed via the Encumbered Estates Court into the hands of the Dunsany Plunketts They left the lands open and from time to time allowed various uses with part of the Castle Field rented for some years by the Town Council as a municipal dump and a small meeting hall for the Royal British Legion erected The Dunsany s held the Castle and surrounds until 1993 when after years of discussion Lord Dunsany sold the land and buildings to the State retaining only river access and fishing rights Restoration Edit The Office of Public Works began a major programme of exploratory works and conservation costing in the region of 4 5 million euro including partial restoration of the moat and the installation of a protective roof on the keep The castle was re opened to the public in 2000 Structure Edit The keep viewed from the undercroft of the Great hall near the River Gate and a plan With an area of 30 000 m2 Trim Castle is the largest Cambro Norman castle in Ireland The design of the central three storey keep also known as a donjon or great tower is unique for a Norman keep being of cruciform shape with twenty corners It was built on the site of the previous large ring work fortification in at least three stages initially by Hugh de Lacy c 1174 and then in 1196 and 1201 5 by Walter de Lacy The castle interior was partially the subject of archaeological digs by David Sweetman of the OPW in the 1970s and more extensively by Alan Hayden in the 1990s The surviving curtain walls are predominantly of three phases The west and north sides of the enceinte are defended by rectangular towers including the Trim Gate dating to the 1170s the Dublin gate was erected in the 1190s or early part of the 13th century and the remaining wall to the south with its round towers dates to the first two decades of the 13th century The castle has two main gates The one in the west side dates to the 1170s and sits on top of a demolished wooden gateway The upper stories of the stone tower were altered to a semi octagonal shape c 1200 The Dublin Gate in the south wall is a single round towered gate with an external barbican tower It dates from the 1190s or early 13th century and was the first example of its type to be constructed in Ireland citation needed The Dublin Gate barbican tower at the southern curtain wall left and the main tower right Apart from the keep the main extant structures consist of the following an early 14th century three towered fore work defending the keep entrance and including stables within it accessed by a stone causeway crossing the partly filled in ditch of the earlier ringwork a huge late 13th century three aisled great hall with an under croft beneath its east end opening via a water gate to the river a stout defensive tower turned into a solar in the late 13th century at the northern angle of the castle a smaller aisled hall added to the east end of the great hall in the 14th or 15th century a building possibly the mint added to the east end of the latter hall two 15th or 16th century stone buildings added inside the town gatehouse 17th century buildings added to the end of the hall range and to the north side of the keep and a series of lime kilns one dating from the late 12th century the remainder from the 18th and 19th centuries Access EditThe Office of Public Works operate a Guide Service at Trim Castle and the grounds are open to the public for self guiding on payment of an entry fee Access to the Castle keep is by guided tour only an entry fee also applies In winter the complex is open only on weekends and bank holidays Popular culture Edit Trim and Talbot Castles Also visible are the Royal Mint solar and Trim Cathedral The 1980 movie The Big Red One starring Lee Marvin and Mark Hamill was also partially shot in Trim and in particular at Trim Castle The castle is noted for the part it played in the filming of Mel Gibson s film Braveheart The castle was presented as the walled city of York scenes that took place in London were also filmed here 13 Controversies EditIn 2003 there was a controversy surrounding the decision by the Minister for the Environment Heritage and Local Government Martin Cullen not to oppose the construction of a five storey hotel across the road from the castle The development had been condemned by a local councillor a senior inspector in An Bord Pleanala acting in a private capacity and later choosing to withdraw his appeal lest it be considered a conflict of interest and heritage bodies many of whom had been critical of the government s treatment of other heritage sites such as Carrickmines Castle the ruins of which were excavated partly to allow the completion of a roadway 14 The hotel was opened in August 2006 The recent addition of buildings outside the west side of the town has further intruded on the castle remains See also EditCastles in Great Britain and Ireland List of castles in IrelandReferences Edit Trim Castle Meath Tourism Ireland http www meath ie Tourism Heritage HeritageSites TrimCastle Heritage Ireland Trim Castle Heritage Ireland Trim Castle Archived from the original on 23 May 2013 Retrieved 23 May 2013 ME01634 MANORLAND 1ST DIVISION TRIM CASTLE Trim Castle in R Butler Some Notices of the Castle and of the Ecclesiastical Buildings of Trim led from various authorities Hodges Smith amp Co Dublin 1861 pp 9 134 at pp 13 14 and pp 238 39 Internet Archive Butler Some Notices pp 14 17 ME01634 MANORLAND 1ST DIVISION TRIM CASTLE Butler Some Notices p 27 Internet Archive Butler Some Notices pp 29 30 Butler Some Notices pp 30 33 Duchas the Heritage Service ed 2002 Trim Castle Co Meath pp 20 26 ISBN 0 7557 1282 X a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help Butler Some Notices pp 67 72 Internet Archive Butler Some Notices pp 80 82 Internet Archive Trim Castle Cinematic View Withdrawal of appeal against hotel in Trim to be challenged 7 November 2000Sources EditReeves Smith Terrence 1995 Irish Castles Belfast The Appletree Press Ltd De Breffny Brian 1977 Castles of Ireland London Thames and Hudson Salter Mike 1993 Castles and Strong Houses of Ireland Worc Folly Publications Sweetman David 1999 The Medieval Castles of Ireland Cork The Collins Press McNeill Tom 1997 Castles in Ireland London Routledge Further reading EditSweetman P D 1998 The development of Trim Castle in the light of recent research Chateau Gaillard Etudes de castellologie medievale XVIII 223 230 ISBN 9782902685059 Hayden A R 2011 Trim Castle Co Meath Excavations 1995 8 Archaeological Monograph Series 6 Wordwell Bray amp Stationery Office Dublin External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trim Castle Meath Tourism on Trim Castle website by Meath County Council Heritage of Ireland on Trim Castle Translation of Grimm s Saga No 10 The Ghost of Boyne CastleExternal 3D model 3D model of Trim Castle linked at Sketchfab Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trim Castle amp oldid 1126913731, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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