翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Clover Network
・ Clough Road railway station
・ Clough Undergraduate Learning Commons
・ Clough Williams-Ellis
・ Clough, County Laois
・ Clough, Smith
・ Clough/Ballacolla GAA
・ Clougha Pike
・ Cloughaneely
・ Cloughbawn GAA
・ Cloughduv
・ Cloughduv GAA
・ Cloughfin
・ Cloughfold
・ Cloughgrenan
Cloughjordan
・ Cloughjordan Community Farm
・ Cloughjordan House
・ Cloughjordan railway station
・ Cloughleigh
・ Cloughmills
・ Cloughmore
・ Cloughoughter Castle
・ Cloughtoberfest
・ Cloughton
・ Cloughton Formation
・ Cloughton railway station
・ Clounagh Junior High School
・ Clounmacon GAA
・ Clous van Mechelen


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Cloughjordan : ウィキペディア英語版
Cloughjordan

Cloughjordan, officially Cloghjordan〔(Placenames Database of Ireland )〕 ( , ), is a town in County Tipperary in Ireland. It is in the barony of Ormond Lower, and it is also a parish in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Killaloe.〔(Parishes of Killaloe Diocese. )〕
The town is situated in the north-western part of Tipperary close to the Offaly border. It is almost equidistant from Nenagh, Roscrea and Birr and is close to Ireland's largest river, the Shannon, and Lough Derg.
Poet and patriot Thomas MacDonagh, a native of Cloughjordan, described it as a place "in calm of middle country".
Unusually for a town of its size (the 2002 Census Records places the population at 431), it has three churches – Roman Catholic (SS Michael and John's, built in 1898), Church of Ireland (St Kieran's, 1837) and Methodist (1875).
The proposed new Dáil constituency of Offaly will incorporate 24 electoral divisions from Tipperary North including Cloughjordan.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Constituency Commission Report 2012 – Waterford – Tipperary – Laois – Offaly – Kildare area )
==History==
Developed at the intersection of travel routes between Nenagh, Birr, Borrisokane and Moneygall, the village of Cloughjordan began as an inhabited settlement during the Norman lordship of Ireland of the 13th and 14th centuries when the De Marisco family were allotted land in Ormond under the overlordship of the Butlers by King Henry II. One unit of the De Mariscos (Morris or Morrissey in modern terms) moved into this area, took over the territory and built a stone castle and manor house guarded by a moat surrounding the dwelling.
There is a story which relates that the first De Marisco, who resided here, was a Norman knight who had travelled to the Holy Land to take part in a Crusade against the Saracen invaders. He is said to have brought back a stone from the River Jordan which he built in over the doorway of this castle and it was from that stone that the village got its name – the Stone of Jordan – Clogh Shiúrdáin – Cloughjordan.
Cloughjordan was further developed in the late 17th century by Cromwellian grantees when Colonel John Harrison, an officer in Cromwell's army, was granted an estate of of land around Cloughjordan in payment for his military services. Harrison built a house, now known as Cloughjordan House, at the site of the original Norman Castle of De Marisco and incorporated the old castle into the new building, in which one wall of the castle, about seven and a half feet thick, is still in existence to this day.
Cloughjordan was then remodelled in the late 18th century to include a square in front of the Church of Ireland on the east-west main street.
In 1909 Cloughjordan was one of the first villages in Ireland, after Carlow and Birr, to provide its own rural electrification scheme. The ESB took over the supplying of electricity to the town in 1948.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Cloughjordan」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.