Online Encyclopedia

ENNISCORTHY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 647 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ENNISCORTHY  , a

market
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town of Co .
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Wexford, Ireland, in the north
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parliamentary division, on the side of a steep hill above the Slaney, which here becomes navigable for
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barges of large
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size . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 5458 . It is 771 M . S. by W. from
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Dublin by the Dublin & South-Eastern railway . There are breweries and
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flour-mills; tanning, distilling and woollen manufactures are also prosecuted to some extent, and the town is the centre of the agricultural trade for the district, which is aided by the
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water communication with Wexford . There are important fowl markets and horse-fairs . Enniscorthy was taken by Cromwell in 1649, and in 1798 was stormed and burned by the rebels, whose main forces encamped on an eminence called
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Vinegar Hill, which overlooks the town from the east . The old castle of Enniscorthy, a massive square
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pile with a round tower at each corner, is one of the earliest military structures of the Anglo-Norman invaders, founded by Raymond le Gros (1176) . Ferns, the next station to Enniscorthy on the railway towards Dublin, was the seat of a former bishopric, and the modernized
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cathedral, and ruins of a church, an Augustinian monastery founded by Dermod Mac-Morrough about 116o, and a castle of the Norman period, are still to be seen . Enniscorthy was incorporated by James I., and sent two members to the Irish parliament until the Union .

End of Article: ENNISCORTHY
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