
Dromoland Castle, one of the most famous baronial castles
in Ireland, was the ancestral home of the O'Briens,
Barons of Inchiquin, who are one of the few native Gaelic
families of royal blood and direct descendants of Brian
Boroimhe (Boru) High King of Ireland in the eleventh
century.
| 1002-1014 |
Brian Boru ruled Ireland as High King from his palace in Killaloe.
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| 1014 |
Donough O'Brien, a son of Brian Boru, controlled Dromoland
when it was a defensive stronghold. It was similar
in structure to Bunratty Castle, which was also
an O'Brien stronghold at that time. For the next
900 years a branch of the 0'Briens lived and ruled
from Dromoland Castle. |
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| 1651 |
The Chief of the Clan O'Brien, Morrough, 57th
King of Thomond, was forced to surrender his royalty
to King Henry VIII, thus becoming the Baron of Inchiquin
and First Earl of Thomond. Records show that the
castle was rebuilt during this period. |
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| 1660 |
Sir Donough O'Brien moved the most powerful branch
of the OBriens to Dromoland in the late 17th century.
He was an astute man and managed to avoid declaring
for either King James II or King William. He was
at that time reputed to be the richest man in Ireland. |
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| C1730 |
Sir Edward O'Brien, the 2nd Baronet, was revered as a famous racehorse owner and trainer. He built the Turret on the hill opposite the entrance to Dromoland Estate, from where he would observe his horses race. He once gambled the estate on a horse race; mercifully, Sean Buis won the race and saved the estate. Sean Buis is buried under the Temple, 100 yards from the old entrance to the castle. |
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| 1700-1730 |
The second castle/house at Dromoland was built;
it was more residential in appearance with a design
of the Queen Anne period. The Queen Anne Court,
the charming quadrangle of 29 guestrooms, is a century
older than the rest of today's castle. It was completely
rebuilt inside and redecorated in 1963 when the
castle was redesigned as an hotel. |
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| 1800-1836 |
The present main building of Dromoland Castle,
with its high Gothic-styled grey stone walls, was
rebuilt and designed by the Pain brothers, famous
architects of that period. The castle was built
by the then Lord of Dromoland, Sir Edward O'Brien,
4th Baronet, at great expense. The cost of cutting
and hauling its stone from a nearby quarry on the
Dromoland Estate alone was more than £80,000,
a huge amount in Georgian times. |
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| 1803-1864 |
Dromoland Castle was the birthplace and boyhood home of William Smith O'Brien, M.P. Despite his aristocratic background, Smith O'Brien fought militantly for the rights of oppressed Irish Catholic peasant farmers and led the Young Irelanders rebellion against the British authorities in 1848. He was sentenced to be hanged, drawn and quartered, later exiled instead to Tasmania for his role in the revolt . He returned to Ireland in 1856; there is a statue of him in O'Connell Street, Dublin. He died in 1864. |
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| 1880-1921 |
The wealth of the Barons of Inchiquin dwindled after
a series of Land Acts started in the 1880s. During
this time, landlords were compelled to sell their
tenanted farmlands, thus the Inchiquins lost their
main source of income. They still considered themselves
fortunate, as their castle had survived the troubled
times of Ireland's revolutionary war against Britain.
The homes of many landlords in Ireland were left
in ruins during the Irish Republican Army's war
against the British forces in 1920 and 1921. |
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| 1921 |
The IRA leaders in Dublin marked Dromoland Castle for
destruction. However, sabotage orders were reversed
at the last minute at the urgent request of local
IRA leaders in County Clare, who argued that the
Inchiquin Lords had been fair and benevolent in
dealing with their tenant farmers. Sir Lucius O'Brien,
the 13th Baron of Inchiquin (brother of Sir William
Smith O'Brien), was remembered respectfully by the
people of County Clare for his relief work in the
famine years of the 1840s. |
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| 1922-1940 |
Although the family's good reputation saved the castle during the revolution, the later loss of income after the forced sale of the tenant farms made the castle and the 2,000+ acre estate increasingly difficult for the Inchiquins to keep. After the death of the 15th Baron of Inchiquin in 1929, Dromoland was supported mainly by the personal wealth of his widow, Lady Ethel Inchiquin, an heiress, whose portrait, painted by Herbert Draper, hangs near the staircase in the castle's hall. |
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| 1940-1962 |
After Lady Ethel's death, her oldest son, Sir Donough O'Brien, the 16th Baron of Inchiquin, and his wife, Lady Anne, daughter of Viscount Chelmsford, a Viceroy of India, managed to maintain Dromoland Castle as a traditional ancestral home for more than twenty years. Lord Inchiquin tried to make the estate self-supporting as a dairy farm, but by 1948 was so financially hard pressed that he began to take in tourists as paying guests. |
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| 1962 |
Lord Inchiquin sold the castle, along with some 330 acres of surrounding land, and the hunting and fishing rights to Mr. Bernard McDonough, an American industrialist, whose grandparents were born in Ireland. Conor O'Brien, the 18th baron, and his family live in Thomond House and continue to farm and run part of the estate as a sporting and leisure estate. The pedigree of the Dromoland O'Briens is kept in a vault at Lloyds in London and is 36 feet in length. |
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| 1962 |
The castle underwent major renovations to transform
the ancestral home into a luxury hotel. When the
castle was officially reopened as a Resort Hotel,
visitors who remembered it from the days of the
Inchiquins marvelled at the preservation of its
stately, warm and cheerful baronial country house
atmosphere. The public rooms on the main floor of
the castle look very much the same now as when Lord
Inchiquin's family lived there, although the Lord's
octagonal shaped study, under the round tower, is
now a pleasant cocktail bar, and his library is
now part of the dining room. |
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| 1987 |
A consortium of mainly Irish American investors
purchased the castle and estate. Through their continued
investment and management, the castle has enjoyed
a worldwide reputation for excellence and is regarded
as one of the great resorts in Europe. |
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