- 53°20′01″N 6°14′35″W / 53.333513°N 6.243054°W / 53.333513; -6.243054
Baggotrath Castle, or
Baggotsrath Castle, was a
castle situated at present-day Baggot...
- is
named after Baggotrath, a
feudal manor granted to Hiberno-Norman
judge Robert Bagod in the 13th-century. He also
built Baggotrath Castle,
which was...
- The
family seat was
Mount Merrion House,
County Dublin: they also
owned Baggotrath Castle and
Merrion Castle, both of
which have long
since disappeared....
- Bagot, gave
their name to present-day
Baggot Street. Here they
built Baggotrath Castle,
which for
centuries was the
strongest fortress in Dublin, but...
- Ormond. He was
murdered as a
result of a feud over the
possession of
Baggotrath Castle, near Dublin. He was born in Ireland, the son of
William Cornwalsh:...
-
appointed the
first Chief Justice of the
Irish Common Pleas in 1276. He
built Baggotrath Castle,
which was the
strongest fortress in Dublin: it was
located on...
-
Dublin Aldborough House Áras an Uachtaráin
Ardgillan Castle Ashtown Castle Baggotrath Castle Carrickmines Castle Castleknock Castle Chichester House Clontarf...
-
under Major-General
Patrick Purcell to
occupy the
partially demolished Baggotrath Castle, on the site of the present-day
Baggot Street bridge; its possession...
-
Dublin Aldborough House Áras an Uachtaráin
Ardgillan Castle Ashtown Castle Baggotrath Castle Carrickmines Castle Castleknock Castle Chichester House Clontarf...
-
activity from the
Norman invasion of
Ireland in the 12th century. Rathgar,
Baggotrath and
Rathfarnham are
other areas of
Dublin whose placenames derive from...