place

Gowran (barony)

Baronies of County KilkennyIreland geography stubsUntranslated Irish place namesUse Hiberno-English from October 2020
Ireland 1885 Map of County Kilkenny
Ireland 1885 Map of County Kilkenny

Gowran (; Irish: Gabhrán) is a barony in the east of County Kilkenny, Ireland. The size of the barony is 430.5 square kilometres (166.2 sq mi). There are 35 civil parishes in Gowran. The chief town today is Gowran. The barony contains the ecclesiastical sites of Kilfane and Duiske Abbey The barony of Gowran is situated in the east of the county between the baronies of Fassadinin to the north (whose chief town is Castlecomer), the baronies of Kilkenny, Shillelogher and Knocktopher to the west (whose chief towns are Kilkenny, Bennettsbridge and Knocktopher), and the barony of Ida is to the south. It borders County Carlow to the east. The M9 motorway bisects the barony.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gowran (barony) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gowran (barony)
L2644,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Gowran (barony)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.597222222222 ° E -7.0833333333333 °
placeShow on map

Address

L2644
R95 AH5W (Bramblestown)
Ireland
mapOpen on Google Maps

Ireland 1885 Map of County Kilkenny
Ireland 1885 Map of County Kilkenny
Share experience

Nearby Places

Cantwell Fada
Cantwell Fada

The Cantwell Fada (lit. 'the long/tall (fada) Cantwell'; also known as the Long Man) is an effigy of a knight on display in the ruins of the 14th-century Kilfane Church in Kilfane near Thomastown in County Kilkenny, southern Ireland. The effigy is carved from a single slab of limestone. The knight wears a metal skull-cap covered by a coif, and a chainmail hauberk protecting his torso as far as his knees. It is under a cloth surcoat with deep folds and a sword belt. He has prominent spurs on his feet, showing that he fought on horseback. His legs are crossed, the right leg over the left. This was formerly believed to show that he was a participant in the Crusades, but is now considered a stylistic convention. In the left hand is carried a large shield bearing the arms of the Cantwell family.It is believed to represent Thomas de Cantwell (d. 1319), a Cambro-Norman adventurer who became Lord of Kilfane. The Cantwell family's main castle was Cantwell's Castle in Sandfordscourt. The stone effigy is thought to originally have been a sarcophagus slab which has since been set upright against an inner wall of the church. The statue represents an example of the high standard achieved by Irish sculptural workshops in the Pale prior to a cultural and economic decline marked by the Edward Bruce invasion and the arrival of the Black Death.Hubert Butler, essayist, recalled the local tale that children at the nearby Protestant school were sometimes punished by having to kiss the statue.Nearby is The Longman of Kilfane, a public house and restaurant named for the Cantwell Fada.