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killaloan Cemetery, Clonmel, Tipperary 2 года назад


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killaloan Cemetery, Clonmel, Tipperary

   / @gravevisitations   Freestanding Church of Ireland church, built 1825-7, now ruinous, having three-stage west tower, two-bay nave, lower chancel with single-bay single-storey projections to side elevations of latter. No roof, moulded dressed limestone copings and eaves course, and with crenellations and pinnacles to tower. Coursed dressed limestone walls to nave and tower, with cut limestone quoins. Snecked rusticated limestone to chancel and chancel projections, with cut limestone plinth. Tower has cut limestone pilasters to corners, cut limestone string courses between stages and corbel table to top stage. Pointed arch window openings with cut stone voussoirs and sills, being double-light with limestone bar tracery to nave, and single-light with louvred timber fittings to tower. Triple-light east window with hood moulding and geometric bar tracery. Pointed arch door opening to tower, with raised cut limestone surround and apparently replacing taller pointed-arch opening with dressed stone voussoirs. Shouldered-arch door openings to chancel projections. Graveyard, with pitched roof mausoleum to north-west of church. Elaborate mausoleum to south-west of church. Rubble stone boundary walls to site, with cut sandstone square-profile piers with plinths and caps and decorative double-leaf wrought-iron gates with spearhead detail. Church of Ireland graveyard located 200 metres north of the River Suir. The site contains a derelict church (built 1825), a ruined medieval church and several mausolea. Anner castle is a 19th-century Neo-Gothic construction, with evidence for an earlier building. This earlier structure was not in existence at the time of the civil survey of 1654-56. It is however visible in its earlier T-shape form (Ballina House) on the first edition O.S. map. The land had been in the ownership of the Mandeville family for 330 years having been acquired by Ambrose Mandeville in 1683 (whose ancestors resided in the nearby Ballydine Castle of the same parish since 1325). It was bought from the Mandeville family by the present owner in 2013. Testing has confirmed that the castle was built on the remains of Ballina House which was most likely built in the early 1700’s. A section of cobbled floor and a rectangular stone-lined pit belonging to the earlier phase of building were uncovered. No remains earlier than this phase were found. The finds throughout the project were contemporary with the final use of the house, at the time of the fire in 1926 https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/bui... #death #history #cemetery #Crypt #abandoned

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