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the elite of early seventeenth-century Irish society. They were fashionable yet defendable. The 'Fortified House' was a public display of power and wealth. They represented a long term investment in their owner’s regional future and were monuments to an aspiration for an
English and Continental house style suited to local Irish conditions. On a basic level the construction of a 'Fortified House' represented the owners’ desire to modernise and Anglicize.
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Over the past six decades studies concerning Irish 'Fortified Houses' have identified them as a transitional genre that emerged at the end of the sixteenth century and acted as an architectural bridge between the Irish medieval tower-house and the country manor house of the late seventeenth century.
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England and the Classical and Military architecture coming from Continental Europe. The social, political and military changes that took place from the 1580s-1650s were to play a major role in the development of this unique Irish structure. These houses provided a comfortable living space for
66:. Some examples have square towers at the corners. The interiors were relatively spacious with wooden partitions and numerous fireplaces. In a number of cases 'Fortified Houses' were built onto pre-existing tower houses. 'Fortified Houses' were protected by gun fire from the angle towers and
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The 'Fortified House' drew on the earlier tradition of the tower-house and was influenced by the
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at the end of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth century, the
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279:The Fortified House: A Review
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237:"Current Research Projects"
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256:Joe Nunan (2006) "
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186:Robertstown Castle
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235:Joe Nunan.
216:Manor house
211:Tower house
111:Cromwellian
107:County Cork
80:Old English
74:walls with
60:tower house
56:stronghouse
295:Categories
266:conference
222:References
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85:who built
119:Rush Hall
68:bartizans
282:Archived
205:See also
174:The Mint
144:Examples
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76:gunloops
152:, Navan
40:Ireland
24:Kanturk
194:, Naas
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