Kildalkey

Kildalkey
Cill Dealga
Kildalkey

Location in Ireland

Coordinates: 53°34′13″N 6°54′11″W / 53.5703°N 6.9031°W / 53.5703; -6.9031Coordinates: 53°34′13″N 6°54′11″W / 53.5703°N 6.9031°W / 53.5703; -6.9031
Country Ireland
Province Leinster
County County Meath
Population (2006)
  Urban 518
Time zone WET (UTC+0)
  Summer (DST) IST (WEST) (UTC-1)
Irish Grid Reference N724586
Kildalkey is also the name of a headland on Heard Island in the Australian Antarctic

Kildalkey or Kildalky (Irish: Cill Dealga, meaning "Dealga's church") is a village and a parish in the Barony of Lune, county and diocese of Meath, Ireland.

Population

The population of the village was 137 at the time of the 1996 Census. By the 2002 Census the village had a massive 278% growth to 518.

History

The patron saint is Saint Dymphna, to whom the Catholic church is dedicated. Designed by the architect W H Byrne, it was consecrated in 1898. The Protestant church, by the architect Joseph Welland (1798-1860), was consecrated in 1856 and was situated at Rathcormick, 2 miles west of the village. It was demolished in the 1960s. Christianity came to Kildalkey in the 5th century when St Mo-Luog founded a monastery there and the parish is mentioned in the Book of Kells. A section of the Pale runs through the parish.

A castle (or tower-house) dating from c.1430, which was built by the Nugent family, is at Moyrath. There are seventeen townlands, all of which are listed with their residents in Griffith's Valuation of 1854. These are: Balatalion, Ballinadrimna, Baskinagh, Clonylogan, Clonmore, Clown, Corballis, Moattown, Moyrath, Neilstown, Portanob, Pubblestown, Rathcormick, Rathkeenan, Shanco, Woodtown Abbot and Woodtown West. The following families are historically associated with the parish: Barnewall, Nangle, Nugent, and Potterton. The principal landlords in the parish were the Earls of Darnley although Speaker William Conolly and later Henry Grattan held Moyrath.

External links

References

S Lewis, 'A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland' (1837), vol 2, p.79; O Falsey, 'Kildalkey: a Parish History' (2001); H Potterton, 'Rathcormick: a childhood recalled' (2001); H Potterton, 'Potterton People and Places: three centuries of an Irish family' (2006).

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