Ballynacargy

Ballynacargy
Baile na Carraige
Town

Ballynacargy
Ballynacargy

Location in Ireland

Coordinates: 53°34′58″N 7°32′14″W / 53.5827°N 7.5372°W / 53.5827; -7.5372Coordinates: 53°34′58″N 7°32′14″W / 53.5827°N 7.5372°W / 53.5827; -7.5372
Country Ireland
Province Leinster
County County Westmeath
Government
  Dáil Éireann Longford-Westmeath
Population (2002)
  Urban 1,382
Time zone WET (UTC+0)
  Summer (DST) IST (WEST) (UTC-1)

Ballynacargy, or Ballinacarrigy, (Irish: Baile na Carraige) is a small village in County Westmeath, Ireland on the Royal Canal and the R393 regional road. The last official commercial navigation of the canal took place in 1955.

Public transport

Bus Éireann route 448 provides a link to Mullingar on Fridays only departing at 10.15 and returning from Mullingar at 13.30. The nearest railway station is Mullingar railway station approximately 15 kilometres distant. Until the evening of 24 August 2013 Bus Éireann route 118 (Dublin-Mullingar-Longford) served Ballynacargy on Saturdays only allowing passengers to travel into Longford for a few hours.[1][2]

History

The village primarily owes its existence to the Royal Canal which opened in 1817. The origins of the village go back much further. The first recorded reference to it dates from 1537 after the dissolution of the nearby monastery at Tristernagh Abbey. Attached to the monastery was a leper hospital, a rarity by that time. It is thought that the village initially grew with the decline of Kilbixy, an important town in County Meath 500 years ago.

The local parish is still called Kilbixy and is home to a mausoleum built by a Lord Sunderlin in 1798.

Northeast of the village are the ruins of Templecross Church from where the ruins of Tristernagh Abbey are visible. Templecross was converted to a Protestant church in the 17th century. The abbey, also known as the Priory of Kilbixy was founded in 1192 by Geoffrey de Constantine. An Augustinian priory, the abbey achieved some fame from its establishment until 1536 when the commissioners of the English King Henry VIII ransacked and destroyed it.

Notable people

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 29, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.