Moyne Abbey Explained

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Moyne Abbey
Native Name:Mainistir na Maighne
Native Name Lang:ga
Order:Franciscans
Established:c.1455
Disestablished:1590
Status:Inactive
Public Access:Yes
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation2:National Monument of Ireland
Designation2 Offname:Moyne Abbey
Designation2 Number:103

Moyne Abbey [1] is a ruined medieval Franciscan friary in Killala, County Mayo, Ireland. Founded at some point before 1455, the abbey was suppressed in 1590.

History

It was founded before the year (1455) by Fr Nehemias O'Donoghue, who was the provincial vicar at the time, and consecrated in 1462.[2] It is located north of Ballina on the west side of Killala Bay on the old Ballina or "French" road. Like its neighbour, Rosserk Friary, it was burnt by Sir Richard Bingham, Elizabeth I of England's governor of Connacht, in 1590 in Reformationist zeal. It’s believed friars continued to reside there until about 1800.[3]

The friary was built in the late Irish Gothic style and has extensive ruins, consisting of a church and domestic buildings situated around a central cloister. Its west doorway is a seventeenth insertion. Its east window displays fine switchline tracery.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mainistir na Maighne/Moyne Abbey . 2022-11-24 . logainm.ie . en.
  2. O'Donoghue . Rod . July 2002 . Some abbeys and monasteries with O'Donoghue connections . The O'Donoghue Society Journal . 4-9.
  3. https://www.discoverireland.ie/Arts-Culture-Heritage/moyne-abbey/50329 "Moyne Abbey", Discover Ireland, Failte Ireland