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Cashel (/ ˈ k æ ʃ əl /; Irish: Caiseal, meaning 'stone ringfort') [5] is a town in County Tipperary in Ireland. Its population was 4,422 in the 2016 census . [ 1 ] The town gives its name to the ecclesiastical province of Cashel .
The Eóganachta (Modern Irish: Eoghanachta, pronounced [ˈoːnˠəxt̪ˠə]) were an Irish dynasty centred on Cashel which dominated southern Ireland (namely the Kingdom of Munster) from the 6/7th to the 10th centuries, [1] and following that, in a restricted form, the Kingdom of Desmond, and its offshoot Carbery, to the late 16th century.
The Baptism of the King of Cashel by St Patrick, painted by James Barry, c. 1780s. Óengus mac Nad Froích was the progenitor of the Eóganacht Chaisil.. Eóganacht Chaisil were a branch of the Eóganachta, the ruling dynasty of Munster between the 5th and 10th centuries.
Eóghanacht Airthir Chliach (Tipperary town district) Eóghanacht Durluis (in or near Thurles, in the barony of Eliogarty) Dal gCais dynasty. The High King of Ireland, Brian Boru, fortified Cashel in 990. Murtagh O'Brien, King of Cashel, in presence of the chiefs and clergy, made a grant in 1101 of the "Rock" with the territory around it to O ...
Dermot O'Hurley (c. 1530 – 19 or 20 June 1584)—also Dermod or Dermond O'Hurley, (Irish: Diarmaid Ó hUrthuile) (Elizabethan English: Darby Hurley or Dr. Hurley) [1] —was the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Cashel during the Elizabethan era religious persecution of the Catholic Church in Ireland and who remains one of the most celebrated of the Irish Catholic Martyrs.
Cashel (also known as Cashel Borough) was a constituency represented in the Irish House of Commons until its abolition on 1 January 1801. It returned two members to the Parliament of Ireland to 1800.