1450 – Bective Abbey, Bective, Co. Meath
Bective Abbey is a Cistercian abbey on the River Boyne, founded by Murchad O’Maeil-Sheachlainn in 1147 as a ‘daughter house’
Bective Abbey is a Cistercian abbey on the River Boyne, founded by Murchad O’Maeil-Sheachlainn in 1147 as a ‘daughter house’
The four-storey castle was originally square with four round turrets at the corners.
Constructed over several centuries – the classic form of the fortified Irish tower house visible as part of the Jacobean mansion.
Construction started circa 1700 for Alderman John Graham.
Randalstown House was begun about 1710 and extended twice in the later part of the eighteenth century.
Stackallan House is one of the very few surviving classical Irish country houses from the early eighteenth century.
Summerhill House was a 100 roomed country house which was the ancestral seat of the Langford Rowley family.
Attributed to Francis Bindon by the Knight of Glin in the 1960s,
Bellinter House was home to the Preston family for nearly two centuries and is one of the finest examples of country architecture in Co.
A large five-bay, four-story house built in or around 1750 by William Waller.