Duleek a village in County Meath, Ireland
Duleek takes is name from Irish work daimh liag, meaning house
of stones and referring to an early stone-built church,
St Cianan’s Church, the ruins of which are still visible in
Duleek today. The Duleek Heritage Trail has been
conceived as a series of stepping stones through the
village and its long and varied history.
It began as an early Christian monastic settlement.
St Patrick established a bishopric here about
450 AD, which he placed in the care of St Cianan on
November 24, 489. The place was sacked several times
by the Norsemen between 830 and 1149 and was also
pillaged by the Anglo-Normans in 1171. In April 1014
the bodies of Brian Ború and his son lay in state in
Duleek on their way to Armagh. The 12th century
saw the reconstitution of the original monastery as
St Mary’s Abbey.
The first Anglo-Norman Overlord of Meath, Hugh de
Lacy, established a manor and constructed a motte
castle at Duleek. About 1180 he granted St Cianan’s
Church, together with certain lands, to the
Augustinians. The churchyard of the now disused
Church of Ireland church occupies part of the site of
the early monastery.
The village’s four crosses and the lime tree on the
village green are reminders of Duleek’s links to the
struggle between William and James and to wider
European unrest at the time of Louis the XIV of France.
On a more romantic/adventurous note, Duleek is also
associated with a Robin Hood type highwayman –
Collier the Robber – who used the Duleek Commons
as a base from which to rob passing stage coaches.
Besides offering bandits a hideout, the Commons is
particulary noted for its distinctive flora and fauna
and its wild-bird activity.
More>>http://www.meathtourism.ie/downloads/duleekheritagetrail.pdf
http://www.duleekheritage.com/