Cashel, County Galway
Cashel (Irish: an Caiseal) is a village in County Galway, in the province of Connacht, Ireland. It is located west of Galway city and southeast of Clifden, on the coast.
History
The name Cashel derives from the Irish Caiseal, referring to the stone ringfort surrounding the old part of the cemetery in Caiseal Ard/High Cashel, whose remains lie on the slope of a mountain about 1 km north-east of the town.
To the west is Toombeola Bridge, near which are the remains of a Dominican Abbey, founded in 1427, by one of the O'Flaherty clan which held sway over Connemara until the rule of James II of England.
In 1969, the Général de Gaulle spent two weeks in Cashel, after he resigned the presidency of France, in Cashel House Hotel.[1]
- Cashel House Hotel
- Guestbook
- Plaque
- Coastal panorama
gollark: SQLite stores all data in a file. So the best I could do is muck with the filesystem perms to enforce that.
gollark: ++magic sql INSERT INTO marriages (e1, e2, information, married_at) VALUES ('<@!330678593904443393>', 'foxes (the species)', 'platonic unidirectional marriage', strftime('%s', 'now'));
gollark: Okay!
gollark: You are NOT getting that access because I do not know how to secure arbitrary SQL commands.
gollark: Or marriages to inanimate objects.
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cashel, County Galway. |
- http://www.connemaraireland.com/cashel/ Connemara Ireland: Cashel. Retrieved 27 December 2006.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.