Dough Castle
Dough Castle (originally Dumhach Ui Chonchuir) is a ruined castle at Lahinch in County Clare, western Ireland. It was built by the O'Connors in 1306 and in 1584 it was held by the family of Sir Donal O'Brien.[1] In 1654, Cromwellian officer Colonel Stubber saved the castle from demolition, and in 1675 the castle still had the full tower with a two-storey house attached.[1] Due to poor foundations on sand,[1] it collapsed several times and today it is in ruins, with little more than part of the O'Brien tower remaining[2] on Lahinch Golf Course near where the Dealagh joins the Inagh River. There was another castle in the vicinity, O'Brien's Castle, built by Turlough O'Brien of the O'Brien clan in 1588 to defend against the Spanish, but nothing remains of this fortress.[3]
References
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- 1 2 3 "Lahinch Places of Interest". Clare County Library. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
- ↑ Fraser, James (1844). Hand-book for Ireland. W. Curry, Jr. p. 395.
- ↑ Gerrard, David (2004). The Hidden Places of Ireland. Travel Publishing Ltd. p. 46. ISBN 978-1-904434-10-8.
Coordinates: 52°57′4″N 9°21′2″W / 52.95111°N 9.35056°W