Online Encyclopedia

CARLOW

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 346 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CARLOW  , the

county
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town of Co . Carlow, Ireland, on the navigable
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river Barrow . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 6513 . It is 56 m . S.W. of
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Dublin by the
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Great
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Southern & Western railway . The castle (supposed to have been founded by
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Hugh de Lacy, appointed governor of Ireland in 1179, but sometimes attributed to King John), situated on an eminence overlooking the river, is still a chief feature of attraction in the general view of the town, although there is not much of the
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original
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building
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left . It consisted of a hollow quadrangle, with a massive round tower at each angle . The
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principal buildings are the
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Roman Catholic College of St Patrick (1793), a plain but spacious building in a picturesque park adjoining the Roman Catholic
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cathedral of the diocese of
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Kildare and Leighlin; the
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Protestant parish church, with a handsome steeple of
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modern erection; the court-house, where the assizes are held, an octagonal stone building with a handsome Ionic portico; and other county buildings . The cathedral, in the Perpendicular style, has a highly ornamented west front, and a monument to Bishop James Doyle (d . 1834) . The Wellington
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Bridge over the river Barrow connects Carlow with the suburb of Graigue . Two m .

N.E. of the town is one of the finest cromlechs in Ireland, and 3 M. to the west is the notable church, of

Norman and pre-Norman date, of Killeshin in Queen's county . The
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industries of Carlow consist of
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brewing and
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flour-milling, and a considerable trade is carried on in the sale of butter and eggs . Carlow was of early importance . In the reign of
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Edward III. the king's
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exchequer was removed thither, and 500, a large sum at that period, applied towards surrounding the town with a strong wall . In the early
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part of the reign of Queen Elizabeth the castle was taken, and the town burned by the Irish chieftain, Rory Oge O'More . When summoned to surrender by Ireton, the
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Commonwealth general, during the war of 1641, Carlow submitted without resistance . In the insurrection of 1798 the castle was attacked by an undisciplined
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body of insurgents . They were speedily repulsed, and suffered severe loss, no quarter being given; and, in the confusion of their
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flight, many of theinsurgents took
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refuge in houses, which the king's troops immediately set on fire . Carlow obtained a charter of incorporation as early as the 13th century, and was reincorporated, with enlarged privileges, by James I . The corporation, which was styled " The
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Sovereign,
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Free Burgesses and Commonalty of the Borough of Catherlogh," was authorized to return two members to the Irish parliament . The town returned one member to the Imperial parliament until 1885 .

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