Tallaght Castle Explained
Tallaght Castle (also known as Tallaght House and formerly known as the Archiepiscopal Palace) was a castle in Kilnamanagh, Tallaght, County Dublin, Ireland.[1] It dates from the 14th century. It became an official residence of the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin until 1822.[2] [3] [4] It was taken over by the Dominican Order in 1856.[4] [5]
Notes and References
- Book: The ecclesiastical register: containing the names of the dignitaries and parochial clergy of Ireland : as also of the parishes and their respective patrons and an account of monies granted for building churches and glebe-houses with ecclesiastical annals annexed to each diocese and appendixes : containing among other things several cases of quare impedit . Erck . John Caillard . 1827 . R. Milliken and Son . 1324 Tallaght-castle - remission of money granted to the archbishop of Dublin, on the 26th July in the seventeenth year of Edward II in consideration of his building Tallaght castle .
- Book: Stokes, George Thomas . Some Worthies of the Irish Church: Lectures Delivered in the Divinity School of the University of Dublin . George Thomas Stokes . Hugh Jackson Lawlor . Hugh Jackson Lawlor . Hodder and Stoughton . 1900 . 106.
- Book: The journal of the Royal Historical and Archaeological Association of Ireland . Labours in the cause of Irish Art, etc. . 1870 . 39 . Royal Historical and Archaeological Association of Ireland.
- Book: Clark . Trish . 2010 . Dominican Retreat Centre . France, United Kingdom, Ireland . Hidden Spring . 276 . 9781587680571 .
- News: }. page 5, column 3 . The Morning News . Belfast, Northern Ireland . 25 June 1887 .