Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Downpatrick
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
===Early history=== [[File:Mound of Down.jpg|thumb|The remains of the 'Mound of Down'.]] [[File:St Patrick's Grave Downpatrick - older photo.jpg|thumb|right|Reputed grave of St Patrick]] Downpatrick is one of Ireland's oldest towns. It takes its name from a ''dún'', a medieval royal fort, which stood on a [[drumlin]] overlooking the [[River Quoile]]. In the Middle Ages, the river was an estuary that would have surrounded the drumlin on most sides.<ref name="MacDonald">MacDonald, Philip (2012). [https://www.qub.ac.uk/sites/communityarchaeology/PDFFileStore/Filetoupload,508691,en.pdf "Geophysical Survey and Excavation at the Mound of Down, County Down"]. [[Queen's University Belfast]]. pp.5–14, 33–35.</ref> It is believed that there was a [[ringfort]] on the site in the [[History of Ireland (400–800)|early Middle Ages]]. This may have been the site called ''Ráth Celtchair'' (later anglicized Rathkeltair), the 'fort of [[Celtchar]]', after a hero in the [[Ulster Cycle]] of [[Irish mythology]].<ref name="MacDonald"/> A small [[Celtic Christianity|Christian]] [[monastic settlement]] was also built on the neighbouring drumlin to the south, now known as 'Cathedral Hill'.<ref name="MacDonald"/> Nearby [[Saul Monastery]] was associated with [[Saint Patrick]]. The saint is said to have been buried on Cathedral Hill in the 5th century, and his reputed grave is still a place of pilgrimage. Down Cathedral was later built on this spot.<ref name="MacDonald"/> In the early 11th century, a much bigger fort with earthen ramparts was built on the northern drumlin, now known as the 'Mound of Down'.<ref name="MacDonald"/> This was the capital of the [[Dál Fiatach]], the main ruling dynasty of [[Ulaid]]h (Ulster), who held the title "Rí Uladh", "King of Ulster".<ref name="MacDonald"/> Deirdre Flanagan suggests that the older name ''Dún Lethglaise'' referred to Cathedral Hill, while ''Dún da Lethglas'' was the name of this new royal residence.<ref name="MacDonald"/> The [[Kingdom of Norway (872–1397)|King of Norway]], [[Magnus Barefoot]], was killed in an ambush near Downpatrick in 1102. It is believed his grave is marked by a mound at Horse Island, southwest of Cathedral Hill.<ref>McCormick, Finbar. "[http://www.jstor.org/stable/41406683 The grave of Magnus Barelegs]". ''Ulster Journal of Archaeology'', vol. 68, 2009. pp. 102–109.</ref> [[Saint Malachy]] became the [[Bishop of Down]] (''Dún da Lethglas'') in 1137. He administered the diocese from [[Bangor Abbey|Bangor]] and introduced a community of [[Augustinians]] (canons) to ''Dún da Lethglas'' dedicated to St John the Evangelist. Malachy and his successors repaired and enlarged Down Cathedral.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rankin |first1=Fred |title=Down Cathedral: The Church of Saint Patrick of Down |date=1997 |publisher=Ulster Historical Foundation |pages=20–21}}</ref> In the late 12th century, the area was conquered by [[Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland|Anglo-Normans]] led by [[John de Courcy]], becoming part of his [[Earldom of Ulster]]. In February 1177, a Norman army of 300 men and 20 knights marched north from Dublin and took the town by surprise. The King of Ulster and Dál Fiatach, [[Ruaidrí mac Duinn Sléibe]] (Rory MacDunleavy), tried to retake the town, but was forced to withdraw after a fierce battle.<ref>{{cite book |last=Martin |first=Francis Xavier |author-link=F. X. Martin |editor=Art Cosgrove |title=A New History of Ireland, Volume II: Medieval Ireland 1169–1534 |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2008 |chapter=Chapter 4: Overlord becomes feudal lord, 1172–85|page=115}}</ref> The Normans began building a [[Motte-and-bailey castle|motte]] (fortified mound) inside the older royal fort, but abandoned it when de Courcy made [[Carrickfergus]] his capital in 1178.<ref name="MacDonald"/> In 1183, de Courcy brought in [[Benedictine]] monks from the abbey of [[St Werburgh]] in [[Chester]] (today [[Chester Cathedral]]), England. He built a friary for them at Downpatrick; this building was destroyed by an earthquake in 1245.<ref>{{cite book |author1=DeBreffny, D |author2=Mott, G| year=1976 |title=The Churches and Abbeys of Ireland | publisher=Thames & Hudson | location=London | pages=60–61}}</ref> He also re-dedicated the cathedral to Saint Patrick, giving it the name ''Ecclesia S. Patricii Duni'' in Latin.<ref name="MacDonald"/> It is claimed that de Courcy miraculously found the bones of St Patrick, St [[Brigid of Kildare|Brigid]] and St [[Colmcille]] at Downpatrick. In the presence of the Papal Legate, Vivian, the relics were reburied inside the cathedral on 9 June 1196. This story of their discovery is thought to have been crafted by de Courcy for political reasons.<ref>Rankin, pp.33–34</ref> In the Anglo-Norman and later medieval era the town's name in Latin and English documentation is variously 'Dunum', 'Dun' or 'Down'. The oldest surviving record of the name 'Downpatrick' is in the [[Bodley Survey]] of the early 1600s.<ref name="MacDonald"/> In 1260 [[Brian O'Neill (High-King of Ireland)|Brian O'Neill]], King of [[Tír Eoghain]] (Tyrone) and claimed [[High King of Ireland]], marched to Downpatrick, which was then part of the Anglo-Norman earldom of Ulster. Allied with a Connacht force under Hugh O'Conor, he fought the Anglo-Normans in the [[Battle of Down]]. O'Neill was killed and the Irish were defeated.<ref>Rankin, p.69</ref> The death of O'Neill and defeat of the Irish was lamented in a poem by the [[Cenél nEógain]] bard [[Giolla Brighde Mac Con Midhe]] (1210–1272). The earldom collapsed in the 1300s, but the English retained a foothold in Lecale. In 1375, Niall O'Neill of Tyrone defeated the English at Dundalethglas.<ref>Rankin, p.70</ref>
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)