Clonrush or Clonmulsk (Irish: Cluain Rois[1]) is a civil parish in the barony of Leitrim, now in County Clare, Ireland. The largest settlement in the parish is Whitegate.

Clonrush
Cluain Rois
Civil parish
Clonrush is located in Ireland
Clonrush
Clonrush
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°57′03″N 8°22′22″W / 52.950784°N 8.372747°W / 52.950784; -8.372747
CountryIreland
ProvinceMunster
CountyCounty Clare
Time zoneUTC+0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-1 (IST (WEST))
Websitewww.clonrush.eu

Location

edit

Clonrush is 10.5 miles (16.9 km) to the southwest of Portumna. It is 4.5 by 4.25 miles (7.24 by 6.84 km) and covers 11,850 acres (4,800 ha) of which 4,439 acres (1,796 ha) are in Lough Derg. The parish includes a belt of low-lying land along the lakeside, rising into mountainous country. The road from Woodford to Scarriff crosses the parish.[2]

History

edit

The Clonrush graveyard was established around the 12th century in an early Christian settlement on a ridge beside Church Bay in Lough Derg. The parish church gave its name to the bay. A portion of the building remains, including a 12th-century window in the east gable, restored in the 16th century with cut limestone. In the early 1800s the church was used as a school, and was modified to accommodate a thatched roof. It is now ruined. There are records of a castle on the shoreline near the graveyard and a monument higher up, overlooking it. The graveyard contains a small vaulted house called St. Colman's Oratory, with a Gothic doorway from the 16th century.[3]

The parish in 1837 was in the Catholic union of Clonrush and Inishcaltra, each of which held a chapel.[4] In 1841 the population was 3,115 in 516 houses. The parish in 1848 contained the hamlets of Whitegate, Furnace and Fogarty's. At that time it was within County Galway.[2] In 1898 the parishes of Inishcaltra and Clonrush were transferred from County Galway to County Clare.[5] Today the civil parish is part of the Catholic parish of Mountshannon-Whitegate in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Killaloe. The church of St Flannan is in Whitegate.[6]

Townlands

edit

The townlands are Ballinrooaun, Ballyglass, Ballyhinch, Ballynakillew, Ballynamona, Bargarriff, Birchpark, Boleynagoagh North, Boleynagoagh South, Cappagha, Cappantruhaun, Cartron, Clonrush, Cloonmohaun, Cloonoolia North, Cloonoolia South, Cregg, Derrainy, Drummaanadeevan, Drummaan East, Drummaan South, Drummaan West, Furnace, Garraun, Garryeighter, Gortnascreeny, Gweeneeny, Illaunmore, Kilcooney, Kilkittaun, Lakyle, Meelick, Rinskea, Tintrim and Whitegate.[7]

References

edit
Citations
Sources
  • "Cluain Rois". Placenames Database of Ireland. Retrieved 11 April 2014.
  • Lewis, Samuel (1837). "Clonrush". County Clare: A History and Topography 1837. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  • Madden, Gerard (1993). "For God or King-The History of Mountshannon, County Clare". East Clare Heritage. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  • "Map of Clonrush Parish showing Townlands". Clare County Library. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  • "Mountshannon (Clonrush)". Diocese of Killaloe. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  • O'Brien, Alfie (2014). "Clonrush Graveyard". Clonrush.eu. Retrieved 5 April 2014.
  • "Clonrush". Parliamentary Gazetteer of Ireland 1845. Retrieved 5 April 2014.