County Cork Architecture
A Franciscan house that deserves mention is the monastery of Kilcrea, Co. Cork (Accommodation, Cork, Ireland). Commonly called Kilerca Abbey, it was founded in 1465 a.d. by Cormac MacCarthaigh, Lord of Muskerry, and dedicated to St Brigid. The church consists of a choir and nave with a south aisle, and a transept, with a lofty tower at the junction of the choir and nave. The cloister, surrounded by the conventual buildings, is to the north. The architecture is plain, and the lofty tower, about 80 ft. high, is the most striking feature of the ruin. The priory had a curious history ; at the dissolution it was granted to Sir Cormac MacTaidhg, who did not disturb the Friars. In 1596 the convent was leased to Richard Harding, who also does not appear to have turned out the Friars. It was looted in 1599, but in 1604 the Friars returned. In 1614 it was again granted away by the Lord Deputy, one of the conditions being that the Friars should be driven out.


north are expanses of typical Central Plain country-gently undulating limestone pastures. These are interrupted by east-and-west ridges of sandstones and slates, with picturesque river valleys between. As we pass westward these ridges increase in height and width, till in Western Cork they occupy the whole surface, producing wild and beautiful mountain scenery which continues and develops further in Kerry. The coast-line, as in Kerry, is exceedingly broken, with long and deep sea-inlets in the west. Cork, the capital of the province, lies among cultivated hills whore the east-and-west valley of the Lee dips below sea-level. It is a busy port and railway centre. The railway from Dublin, dropping steeply into the valley, reaches the station through a Grand Parade, Cork long tunnel, and runs on to Queenstown (Cobh) and Youghal. Further west, the Cork, Bandon, and South Coast Railway has its terminus : it serves a large area,
penetrating to the Kerry border. A loop line now connects these two systems. A shorter line runs to Macroom. The port accommodates steamers of considerable ton- nage, but the largest boats lie in the open water of Cork Harbour, some miles down. The city had its origin as a fortified post of the Danes on a small island in the Lee, following on the ecclesiastical settlement founded there by St Finbarre in the seventh century. It has spread far beyond these narrow confines, and in some parts has climbed up the steep hills that rise over the river, so that the houses rise tier above tier. The appearance of the principal street is bright and busy, and many of the public buildings are good. Cork Harbour is an extremely irregular arm of the sea with a narrow entrance, 12 miles in length from Cork city to the open sea. It represents the sunken continuation of the Lee valley, and
really con- sists of two drowned limestone troughs lying between three east-and-west ridges of slate, through which north-and-south passages have been cut by rivers. The first of these ridges rises along the northern edge of the area, by Cork and Midleton ; the second across the centre, forming Great Island, on which stands the important port of Queenstown (Cobh) ; and the third across the mouth, where the twin forts are perched high above the sea. Its structure is illustrated on pp. 34, 35. Youghal is a fishing port and Grand Parade, Cork summer resort at the mouth of the Blackwater, in the extreme east. Kinsalc, Clonakilty, Skibbereen, and Bantry lie on the western coast. Inland, Dunmanway and Bandon are on the Bandon river, and Macroom on the Lee. Along the picturesque valley of the Blackwater are Kanturk, Mallow (an important railway junction) and Fermoy. Northward, in the more level limestone country, are Buttevant and Charleville. Mitchelstown is in the north-east, at the southern base of the Galtee mountains.
Ptolemy, inhabited by a tribe called the Vellabroi, of whom we hear again in the fifth century historian Orosius, but apparently nowhere certainly in Irish traditional history. At the angle was the Notion Akron, which perhaps it is hopeless to identify with certainty among the headlands of that complicated coast-line. Turning to the south coast, we meet the Dabrona river, with a town Ivernis upon it, inhabited by people called Ivemoi. The position identifies these with the River Lee (Sabhrannl in Irish), Cork, and the people there dwelling. The only other place-name is the River Birgos, whose name and position identify it with the Barrow (or rather the estuary of the Barrow and Suir). The sea west of Ireland Ptolemy calls the Okeanos Dutikos; that to the south, the Okeanos Vergionos.






