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This is a list of historic houses in the Republic of Ireland which serves as a link page for any stately home or historic house in Ireland. County Carlow [ edit ]
County Kerry (Irish: Contae Chiarraí) is a county on the southwest coast of Ireland, within the province of Munster and the Southern Region. It is bordered by two other counties; Limerick to the east, and Cork to the south and east. It is separated from Clare to the north by the Shannon Estuary.
This is a list of towns and villages in County Kerry, Ireland. A. Abbeydorney – Mainistir Ó dTorna [1] Annascaul – Abhainn an Scáil [1] ...
Starting in the 1830s, Sir Peter George Fitzgerald, the 19th Knight of Kerry (1808–1880), [15] [16] planted these gardens and stocked them with a unique collection of rare and tender plants from the southern hemisphere, normally grown under glass in Ireland. The gardens are laid out in a naturalistic style as a series of walks.
Caherdaniel (Irish: Cathair Dónall, meaning 'Dónall's stone ringfort') [1] [2] is a village and townland in County Kerry, Ireland, located on the Iveragh peninsula on the Ring of Kerry. It is on the southwestern side of the peninsula, facing onto Derrynane Bay, at a T-junction on the N70 road .
Finuge (Irish: Fionnúig) [1] is a village near Listowel in County Kerry, Ireland. Finuge is a traditional Irish crossroads village with a shop, a pub, Teach Siamsa and a G.A.A. pitch. Sheehan's Thatched House located at Finuge Cross is regarded as one of the oldest surviving authentic thatched houses in Ireland.
Ballyduff (Irish: An Baile Dubh, meaning 'the black town') [2] is a village near Listowel, County Kerry, Ireland.Located on the R551 road between Ballyheigue and Ballybunion on hills above Cashen Bay where the River Feale flows to the sea at the mouth of the River Shannon.
The N21 road from the city of Limerick continues on to Tralee while the N22 road goes to Killarney and other towns in southern Kerry. Ruins in Castleisland, County Kerry The Glanaruddery Mountains to the north and the Stack's Mountains to the west define the beginning of the Vale of Tralee, at the mouth of which Castleisland is situated.