Online Encyclopedia

KILLARNEY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 795 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KILLARNEY  , a

market
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town of county
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Kerry, Ireland, in the east
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parliamentary division, on a branch
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line of the
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Great
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Southern & Western railway, 1854 m . S.W. from
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Dublin . Pop. of urban
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district (1901), 5656 . On account of the beautiful scenery in the neighbourhood the town is much frequented by tourists . The
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principal buildings are the
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Roman Catholic
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cathedral and bishop's palace of the diocese of Kerry, designed by A . W . Pugin, a large
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Protestant church and several hotels . Adjoining the town is the mansion of the
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earl of Kenmare . There is a school of arts and crafts, where
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carving and
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inlaying are prosecuted . The only manufacture of importance now carried on at Killarney is that of fancy articles from arbutus wood; but it owed its origin to iron-smelting
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works, for which abundant fuel was obtained from the neighbouring forests . The lakes of Killarney, about 1 a m. from the town, lie in a basin between several lofty mountain groups, some of which rise abruptly from the
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water's edge, and all clothed with trees and shrubbery almost to their summits . The
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lower lake, or Lough Leane (
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area 5001 acres), is studded with finely wooded islands, on the largest of which, Ross Island, are the ruins of Ross Castle, an old fortress of the O'Donoghues; and on another island, the " sweet Innisfallen " of Moore, are the picturesque ruins of an abbey founded by St Finian the leper at the close of the 6th century .

Between the lower lake and the

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middle or Torc lake (68o acres in extent) stands Muckross Abbey, built by Francis-cans about 1440 . With the upper lake (430 acres), thickly studded with islands, and close shut in by mountains, the lower and middle lakes are connected by the Long Range, a winding and finely wooded channel, 22 M. in length, and commanding magnificent views of the mountains . Midway in its course is a famous echo caused by the Eagle's
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Nest, a lofty pyramidal rock . Besides the lakes of Killarney themselves, the immediate neighbourhood includes many features of natural beauty and of historic
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interest . Among the first are Macgillicuddy's Reeks and the Torc and
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Purple Mountains, the famous pass known as the
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Gap of Dunloe, Mount Mangerton, with a curious depression (the Devil's Punchbowl) near its
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summit, the waterfalls of Torc and Derrycunihy, and Lough Guitane, above Lough Leane . Notable ruins and remains, besides Muckross and Innisfallen, include Aghadoe, with its ruined church of the 12th century (formerly a cathedral) and remains of a round tower; and the Ogham Cave of Dunloe, a souterrain containing inscribed stones . The waters of the neighbourhood provide trout and salmon, and the
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flora is of high interest to the botanist . Innumerable legends centre round the traditional hero O'Donoghue .

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