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  2. Birr Castle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birr_Castle

    Birr Castle (Irish: Caisleán Bhiorra) [1] is a large castle in the town of Birr in County Offaly, Ireland.It is the home of the 7th Earl of Rosse and his family, and as the castle is generally not open to the public, [2] though the grounds and gardens of the demesne are publicly accessible, and include a science museum and a café, a reflecting telescope which was the largest in the world for ...

  3. Birr, County Offaly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birr,_County_Offaly

    The O'Carroll family had a castle located at the present site of Birr Castle. Following the Plantations of Ireland, Birr was located in the Barony of Ballybritt following the formation of King's County (now County Offaly) in 1556. The town itself is an old market and former garrison town dating to the 1620s.

  4. Leviathan of Parsonstown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leviathan_of_Parsonstown

    The Birr Castle station consists of 96 LBAs and 96 HBAs and a total of 96 digital Receiver Units (RCUs). [8] The Birr Castle station on its own is the Irish Low Frequency Array (I-LOFAR) I-Lofar telescope. [9] In 2018, I-LOFAR observed for the first time a billion-year-old red-dwarf, flare star, namely CN Leo , 7.9 light years away. [10]

  5. List of castles in Ireland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_castles_in_Ireland

    Almost two hundred years later in 1837, Duke George Montagu built the current castle to serve as the residence of the Montagu family in Ireland. In the 1950s, the castle and estate were sold by Alexander Montagu to a business man from Tandragee by the name of Mr. Hutchison, and so the castle came to house the Tayto potato crisp factory and the ...

  6. Kinnitty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinnitty

    Kinnitty (Irish: Cionn Eitigh) [2] is a village in County Offaly, Ireland. It is located 13 km east of Birr on the R440 and R421 roads. The village is in a civil parish of the same name.

  7. John's Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John's_Hall

    The building was commissioned by Lawrence Parsons, 2nd Earl of Rosse, whose seat was at Birr Castle, to commemorate the death of his son, John Clere Parsons, who died of scarlet fever in August 1828, aged 26. [2] The building was designed by Bernard Mullins in the neoclassical style and was inspired by the Temple on the Ilissus at Athens.