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393:. Following a third and devastating fire, in 1964, the three Napier sons went to court and requested that the state allow the family trust to be broken up and the estate divided between the three sons. Subsequently, the house and gardens have been restored by Charles and Emily Napier, who open the gardens and run an annual opera festival.
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Irish folklore holds that it is bad luck to damage or disrespect such tombs and that doing so could bring a curse. However, some of the
Loughcrew tombs have been vandalised with graffiti, and security patrols have been put in place.
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No comprehensive dating programme has been conducted there, but the monuments are estimated to date from about 3300 BC. The monuments consist of cruciform chambers, all of which would have been covered by mounds. A unique style of
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In 1980 Irish-American researcher Martin
Brennan discovered that Cairn T in Carnbane East is directed to receive the beams of the rising sun on the spring and autumnal
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monuments are spread across four hilltops: Carnbane East, Carnbane West, Carrickbrack and
Patrickstown Hill. These hills and the tombs themselves are together known as
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311:), Knowth, and Dowth in the Boyne Valley. The Cairn T alignment is similar to the well-known illumination at the passage tomb at Brú na Bóinne (
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for Roman
Catholics. Even though the woods are now gone an excellent example of a Mass Rock can still be seen on the top of
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is found there, including lozenge shapes, leaf shapes, as well as circles, some surrounded by radiating lines. The
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in the subsequent centuries which mirrored that developed by their neighbouring
Cromwellians, the Taylors of
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342:. The family church stands in the grounds of Loughcrew Gardens. With its barren isolated location,
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There are remains of more than twenty ancient tombs at
Loughcrew. It is one of the four main
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Sarah
Champion & Gabriel Cooney. "Chapter 13: Naming the Places, Naming the Stones".
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The
Napiers built an extensive estate of some 180,000 acres (730 km²) in north
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201:. The area is also home to the Loughcrew Estate, from which it is named.
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In more recent centuries
Loughcrew became the seat of a branch of the
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and structural stones of the monuments tend to be from local green
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515:"Security patrols put in place after vandalism at Neolithic site"
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193:) and are the highest point in Meath. It is one of the four main
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The Stars and the Stones: Ancient Art and
Astronomy in Ireland
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Details of how to obtain access to the interior of Cairn T
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The Irish Ordnance Survey: History, Culture and Memory
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photos and videos taken on site for six years in a row
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family, whose most famous member became the martyred
362:of 1652. Their estate at Loughcrew was assigned by
532:"Loughcrew House, Co. Meath - Gilded Magnificence"
475:- Thames and Hudson (1983); later re-published as
354:today. The Plunketts were involved in running the
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346:became a critical meeting point throughout the
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408:List of archaeoastronomical sites by country
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358:of the 1640s and were dispossessed in the
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197:cemeteries in Ireland and is a protected
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600:A Visit to Loughcrew Megalithic Complex
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413:List of megalithic monuments in Ireland
380:Chief Baron of the Exchequer of Ireland
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667:Archaeological sites in County Meath
672:Mountains and hills of County Meath
595:From http://www.mythicalireland.com
448:photos of megalithic art in Cairn T
432:Slieve na Calliagh/Sliabh na Caillí
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677:National monuments in County Meath
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575:Loughcrew at Voices from the Dawn
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374:. The Napiers are descended from
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221:cemeteries in Ireland along with
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585:Loughcrew Information and Images
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505:. Four Courts Press, 2004. p.89
682:4th-millennium BC architecture
580:Art and astronomy at Loughcrew
542:Lyttelton, Celia (May 2009) "
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436:Placenames Database of Ireland
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530:Bunbury, Turtle (2003, 2006)
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128:Loughcrew Megalithic Cemetery
213:The inner passage of Cairn T
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118:National monument of Ireland
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610:Loughcrew Megalithic Centre
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245:, meaning "mountain of the
181:, some decorated with rare
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620:Loughcrew Adventure Centre
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492:. Routledge, 2005. p.193
490:Archaeology and Folklore
643:53.744672°N 7.112483°W
360:Cromwellian Settlement
299:53.743299°N 7.134040°W
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570:at Wikimedia Commons
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648:53.744672; -7.112483
304:53.743299; -7.134040
64:Shown within Ireland
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605:Loughcrew on video
501:Doherty, Gillian.
477:The Stones of Time
340:St Oliver Plunkett
239:Slieve na Calliagh
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187:Slieve na Calliagh
133:Reference no.
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566:Media related to
471:Brennan, Martin,
376:Sir Robert Napier
364:Sir William Petty
356:Irish Confederacy
199:National Monument
179:4th millennium BC
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171:County Meath
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77:County Meath
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263:petroglyphs
163:Loch Craobh
27:Loch Craobh
661:Categories
631:53°44′41″N
419:References
348:Penal Laws
287:53°44′36″N
267:orthostats
235:megalithic
231:Carrowmore
227:Carrowkeel
155:Lough Crew
634:7°06′45″W
568:Loughcrew
382:in 1593.
319:sunrise.
313:Newgrange
290:7°08′03″W
271:gritstone
247:Cailleach
205:The tombs
167:Oldcastle
151:Loughcrew
106:Neolithic
19:Loughcrew
397:See also
391:Headfort
378:who was
336:Plunkett
73:Location
479:(1996).
366:to the
278:equinox
175:Ireland
102:Periods
97:History
81:Ireland
233:. The
387:Meath
159:Irish
372:1655
229:and
87:Type
546:,"
253:of
251:hag
241:or
153:or
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370:c.
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