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10 Best place to visit in Monaghan Ireland

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Top 10 Best Places to Visit in Ireland 2024

Trip Xtreme presents the hot topics around travel, things to do, adventure, places to visit, and much more. Today, we present the 'Top 10 Best Places to Visit in Ireland 2024' which includes the likes of Dublin, Cork, Galway, and more. Watch premium content on travel to get entertained and inspired exclusively on Trip Xtreme!

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Top 7 Places in DONEGAL, IRELAND ???????? A local’s guide to the most SCENIC county on the Emerald Isle

Giant cliffs, rugged coastline, spectacular mountains, beautiful beaches... Even though it's quite remote, Donegal just has to be on your bucket list when travelling in Ireland as it is one of the most scenic counties on the Emerald Isle.
Watch this video to know for sure what places should be on your Donegal bucket list!

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Clones Town, County Monaghan, Ireland - Ireland Attractions

Clones Town County, Monaghan, Ireland - Doesn't it feel good to be back home? It can be amazing to bring back the memories from our childhood - sure we remember things every now and again, but you cannot beat actually walking the streets where you grew up for memories ( good and bad! to come flooding back ). Hence off to Clones, County Monaghan, Ireland, the town where I grew up.

For the few who do not know - Clones is a small town in western County Monaghan, Ireland. The Clones area was part of the Border Region which was earmarked for economic development by the Irish Government due to the current below average economic growth in the area. County Monaghan is on the border with County Fermanagh in Northern Ireland which brings its own advantages and challenges.

Walking through the town and seeing the old places which are still standing there, just about! :-)

During our walk of the town we came across a picture from 1843 for the Market House and it was amazing to see the buildings from the photo are still standing around the Diamond. Amazing.

On the Diamond we have the imposing buildings such as Ulster Bank - which sadly closed in 2016....to all the pubs, post office, credit union and more.

Checking out the tourist map, trying to decide in which direction we should go, we finally managed to go down to the Wee Abbey, just off the Diamond - a great stop for history buffs. The most imposing feature on the Diamond is the Celtic High Cross. Down the road towards Cavan, to the right - is the path to the Motte and Bailey Fort, a piece of ground showing where an old fort used to stand with an amazing view across the local area. Plenty of history here!!

Towards the bottom of Fermanagh Street is the Butter Yard and the relatively new statue of the children playing leapfrog. Pretty Nice!

Close to the Round Tower is the Ionad Cassandra Hand Centre where they used to make lace and was built in 1847, coming again to the Wee Abbey. Across the road from the Lace centre is the Round Tower and graveyard.

There are other towns which one could visit around the North of Ireland, such as Letterkenny in county Donegal ( there is also Bushmills Town which is found on the north coast of Ireland ( and you could visit Newcastle Co. Down which is a lovely place to go to if you like beaches! :-) (

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EXPLORING MONAGHAN TOWN in Ireland

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Monaghan (/ˈmɒnəhən/ MON-ə-hən; Irish: Muineachán [ˈmˠɪnʲəxaːnˠ]) is the county town of County Monaghan, Ireland. It also provides the name of its civil parish and barony.

ETYMOLOGY
The Irish name Muineachán derives from a diminutive plural form of the Irish word muine meaning brake (a thickly overgrown area) or sometimes hillock. The Irish historian and writer Patrick Weston Joyce interpreted this as a place full of little hills or brakes.Monaghan County Council's preferred interpretation is land of the little hills, a reference to the numerous drumlins in the area.

HISTORY
Early history
The Menapii Celtic tribe are specifically named on Ptolemy's 150 AD map of Ireland, where they located their first colony – Menapia – on the Leinster coast circa 216 BC. They later settled around Lough Erne, becoming known as the Fir Manach, and giving their name to Fermanagh and Monaghan.[citation needed] Mongán mac Fiachnai, a 7th-century King of Ulster, is the protagonist of several legends linking him with Manannan mac Lir. They spread across Ireland, evolving into historic Irish (also Scottish and Manx) clans.
The northwestern side of St Macartan's Cathedral in Monaghan.
The Battle of Clontibret between the forces of Earl Hugh Ó Néill of Tír Eoghain, The Ó Néill, and the English Crown was fought in northern Monaghan in May 1595. The territory of Monaghan had earlier been wrested from the control of the MacMahon sept in 1591, when the leader of the MacMahons was hanged by authority of the Dublin government; this was one of the events that led to the Nine Years War and the Tudor conquest of Ireland.
On the Hill of Lech, the Hill of the Stone was the inauguration stone of the Mac Mahons. It overlooks Ballagh Lough to the west, which was once known as Lough Leck. Situated 5 kilometres (3 miles) south-west of Monaghan, the petrosomatoglyph was last used in 1595, but was destroyed by a farm owner in 1809. It is said to be built into the wall of a mill.
In 1801, Monaghan town, along with the rest of the Rossmore Estate, became the property of the Westenra family.  460  The Rossmore Estate was inherited in August of that year by Warner Westenra, 2nd Baron Rossmore from his uncle. The Westenra family remained as the principal landlords of Monaghan town up into the early twentieth-century. Their 'ancestral seat' was established at Rossmore Castle (also known as Rossmore Park), a large country house mainly built in stages during the nineteenth-century on the south-western edge of Monaghan Town. The castle was mainly built in the neo-Jacobean style of architecture.
The castle stood on the south-western edge of Monaghan town and was abandoned just after the Second World War. The ruins of the castle were blown up by Monaghan County Council in 1974.

CULTURE
Monaghan continues to host one of Ireland's most prestigious and established blues festivals, the Harvest Time Blues Festival. It is hosted every September across Monaghan town.
The Fiddler of Oriel Muineachán Competition (also known as Féile Oriel) first held in 1969 returned in 2009 to celebrate its fortieth anniversary. It is held every May Bank Holiday weekend.
Founded in 1974, Monaghan County Museum is recognised as one of the leading provincial museums in Ireland, with a prestigious Council of Europe Award conferred in 1980, among others, to its credit. The museum is located in a mid-Victorian stone building of three stories, formerly two separate town houses, on Hill Street. It aims to acquaint its visitors with the history of County Monaghan and its people.
The Garage Theatre is an arts facility located on the Monaghan Education Campus. It hosts a wide range of activities including drama, music, dance and film.
The town is home to Monaghan United Football Club, formerly of the League of Ireland Premier Division.
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Trip to Monaghan Town, Hillgrove Hotel & Castle Leslie

Monaghan is a Northern County in Ireland (some do ask!) :-) And no, it is not in Northern Ireland (politically) but is geographically. It sits on the border with the North. A small town - great for nights out and food!

County Monaghan is part of the Border Region and is in the province of Ulster and it is named after its county town Monaghan. After the 20th century Irish War of Independence and the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty, Monaghan was one of the three Ulster counties to join the Irish Free state rather than Northern Ireland - which is the reason why it is not considered in Northern Ireland politically but will be always seen as part of it from the geographical side.

County Monaghan is not huge, it is considered the smallest of Ulster's nine counties by both size and population, but still it is considered a good place to head for and have some good time with friends, eat some good food, and even visit some attractions along the way - just the same way we did in our trip.

Being in Monaghan and having some time to do several things, there are those places which we would recommend for our fans and followers. Monaghan County Museum is one of the attractions to visit in Monaghan which will tell you more about the history of the place, you could also pass by the Celtic High Cross and St. Tiernach's Grave, the Busy Bee Ceramics where you could make your own pot or decorate your set of ware, visiting St. Louise Convent Heritage Centre, going to St. Joseph's church, and there are those other places which you could still check but according to which town you will be visiting and staying at; for example, there is Inniskeen and Patrick Kavanagh Centre which are located in Inniskeen.

Even though the main purpose of our trip was to meet up with some friends at Hillgrove Hotel, we also managed to pass by Castle Leslie - which was the first time for us to do so - and enjoy a walk around it, and we could say that it was truly a good experience to get to see something for the first time although you should have passed by it years before.

Castle Leslie is home to an Irish branch of Clan Leslie which is both the name of a historic Country House and 1,000 acre Estate adjacent to the village of Glaslough, north-east of Monaghan town in County Monaghan. This castle is different because it is fashioned in the Scottish Baronial style and was designed by the firm of Lanyon, Lynn and Lanyon in 1870 for Sir John Leslie. The country house present a rather dour and austere facade and is sited in such a way so as to mask the gardens to an approaching visitor and there is also a Renaissance style cloister that links the main house to a single storey wing containing the library and the billiard room.

We have passed by this Leslie Castle and felt ashamed of never being there before although I have been working a long time ago in the Hillgrove Hotel which I was heading to, but eventually things come our way and it was good to experience this castle and get the chance to know more about what it is and how it looks like.

One important and good thing about this trip for us was the timing we have chosen - which might be a coincidence - but still, we managed to head to the Hillgrove Hotel to meet our friends when Christmas was just around the corner and this gave us the chance to enjoy the lighting of the place and get the festive feeling of Christmas, not just that, but it was also different to hear the Christmas songs at the petrol station while fueling the car =)

The large towns in County Monaghan include Monaghan, Carrickmacross, Castleblayney, Clones ( Ballybay and that's in addition to the other county towns which are found there and which include Ballinode, Doohamlet, Drum, Emyvale, Inniskeen, Glaslough, Killanny, Knockatallon, Magheracloone, Newbliss, Oram, Rockcorry, Scotshouse, Scotstown, Smithborough, Threemilehouse, Tydavnet, Truagh, and Latton.

Ireland and Northern Ireland are filled with lots and lots of places, restaurants and bars which one could visit to check the history of the country and the attractions it carries and at the same time enjoy nice traditional food and drinks which might not be found anywhere else (

It is always important to make your trip to any country different and filled with different experiences and that is the reason why we are trying to bring you all the places we go to visit and all the experiences we pass by in order for you to write them down, plan your trip to Northern Ireland or Ireland, and directly head for them when you are eventually here.

Share with us your experience with County Monaghan and tell us the things you liked most about the place and those which you might not recommend for other people coming in the future to visit it.

Some of the best locations around Ireland / Northern Ireland and further afield. A travel blog/vlog of the hidden treasures that are on our doorstep.

Discover Monaghan with a Guided Tour - Daisy Montgomery

Discover Monaghan with a Guided Tour
Make the most of your visit and really explore how much more there is to Monaghan with a tailored tour from a Fáilte Ireland approved Regional Tour Guide. Covering the length and breadth of the county from the villages of north Monaghan to the monastic town of Clones, you’re sure to find one to suit! Click the videos below to find out more. Videos provided courtesy of Monaghan Integrated Development.

Restaurants in Monaghan, Ireland

Have a really tasty meal again, in a good restaurant or eatery nearby. Enjoy a great dinner with near Monaghan. Whether gourmet, fast food or a romantic candlelight dinner, you will find something suitable here.

Here you can find Restaurants in Monaghan, Ireland:
1) The Batch Loaf
1-3 North Rd, Roosky, Monaghan
(047) 72253

2) Neighbourhood
13 Glaslough St, Roosky, Monaghan, H18 YN56
(047) 75587

3) Monaghan Spice
9 The Diamond, Roosky, Monaghan, H18 P282
(047) 81646

4) The Squealing Pig Bar & Restaurant
The Diamond, Roosky, Monaghan
(047) 84562

5) Andy's Bar & Restaurant
12 Market St, Mullaghmonaghan, Monaghan, H18 N772
(047) 82277

6) Eastern Balti
31-32 Market St, Mullaghmonaghan, Monaghan, H18 XN23
(047) 77895

7) Kinga's Cafe
Russell Court, 1 Market Rd, Mullaghmonaghan, Monaghan
087 221 2090

8) Tuscany Restaurant
Church Square, Tirkeenan, Monaghan
(047) 81966

9) Hakka
79 Glaslough St, Roosky, Monaghan, H18 Y019
(047) 62697

10) The Monte Carlo
11 Glaslough St, Roosky, Monaghan, H18 DX08
(047) 82305


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Top 5 Recommended Hotels In Monaghan County | Best Hotels In Monaghan County

Top 5 Recommended Hotels In Monaghan County | Best Hotels In Monaghan County

1) Hillgrove Hotel, Leisure & Spa, Monaghan
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2) The Shirley Arms Hotel, Carrickmacross
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3) Nuremore Hotel & Country Club, Carrickmacross
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4) Four Seasons Hotel & Leisure Club, Monaghan
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5) Sliabh Beagh Hotel, Monaghan
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Castle Leslie Estate ,Co.Monaghan ,Ireland

Discover Monaghan - The Fun ENDS Here

I was shocked upon watching Irish tourism videos that Monaghan had been frightfully forgotten in them and I decided that Monaghan deserved its very own tourism video to show the world just how great it is. And bonus points to anyone who knows what the ending is a homage to!

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AHI Travel: Undiscovered Ireland ~ featuring Donegal, Mayo & Monaghan

Ireland’s dazzling coastal beauty takes center stage on this magical, 10-night journey! Begin in the east in dynamic Dublin. Then, head westward with stops in Galway and Cong before exploring the breathtaking, untamed Wild Atlantic Way. See Achill Island’s moors and mountains, admire Connemara’s glacier-carved landscape and watch lively dogs herding sheep. Next, venture north on a less explored route to the hidden gem, County Donegal. Be awed by spectacular Slieve League, Ireland’s highest sea cliffs, and see Arranmore Island by land and water. From there, travel into Northern Ireland to discover the vibrant walled city of Derry-Londonderry and Giant’s Causeway, a natural wonder of interlocking basalt columns. This well-rounded, small-group experience features visits to two 19th-century castles, plus lectures on Irish literature and art, a music and dance performance, and a culinary tour. Enjoy stays at deluxe and first-class hotels, including a family-owned castle estate, and a generous meal plan with wine at dinner.

Explore the magnificent Castle Leslie Estate in Monaghan in Ireland's Ancient East

Top 5 Recommended Hotels In Monaghan | Best Hotels In Monaghan

Top 5 Recommended Hotels In Monaghan | Best Hotels In Monaghan

1) Hillgrove Hotel, Leisure & Spa, Monaghan
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2) Four Seasons Hotel & Leisure Club, Monaghan
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3) Westenra Arms Hotel, Monaghan
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4) Emy Lakehouse - near Castle Leslie, Glaslough, Monaghan
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5) Sliabh Beagh Hotel, Monaghan
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A Walk Around Clones on a Winter Day - County Monaghan

We had a walk around Clones - checking out the Diamond, Round Tower, Fermanagh Street, Clones Abbey, The Butteryard beside the Creighton Hotel. Enjoying the history that is in every corner of the city...

Clones is known to be a small town that is located in western county Monaghan in Ireland. Clones also shares a border with county Fermanagh in Northern Ireland and this has been considered a reason for the economic status and problems that it went through since 1921 because the creation of the Irish border banned its access to a large part of its economic hinterland for many years.

We believe that Clones is a historic place since history fills it in every single corner one will get the chance to move across, although when it comes to the landmarks which one could visit, they might end up not being much and the rest will be about walking through the old streets and enjoying the old buildings, which was also part of the trip we have been on.

Through the tour that we have made in Clones, county Monaghan, we visited the Round Tower which is considered one of the most famous landmarks there. The Round Tower was built from sandstone and is believed to date back to the 10th century, which we are not totally sure of. This tower stood at almost 23 meters height including the conical cap which is missing at this point. The Round Tower has four storeys including the bell storey with a single window on each one of them except for the bell storey which had the usual four windows; one on each cardinal point on the compass. Just beside the tower, you will find some graves that let people sometimes refer to the place as the Clones Round Tower graveyard.

In addition to the Round Tower, we have also been to the Celtic Cross; the Celtic Cross which is standing on the Diamond also dates back to the 10th century and is made from sandstone as well. This cross is considered a combination of two separate crosses that mix the head of one and the shaft of another, and it reaches a height of 4.57 meters. The Celtic Cross in Clones is one of the famous attractions in the place for the history it carries since it is believed to be among the remains of a monastery founded in Clones by St. Tighernach in the sixth century. The faces of the shaft are not plain or free but they carry different pictures that are related to the biblical scenes, making it more interesting for those seeing it for the first time to come closer and inspect it all by themselves.

If you are visiting Clones and you are still searching for other significant places and spots to check in the place then there is also St. Tiernach's Grave, which was another place that we got to pass by and discover in real during our trip.

It is always different and exciting to get to experience a new place for the first time and discover all those different historical places which are found in it - just like what we have done while visiting Clones even though it wasn't the first time for us there, yet we got to see some places for the first time.

While walking through the streets of Clones, in addition to those old building and streets, you might also come across some sculptures, such as the one for the kids playing which we have passed by, and that is the reason why we always believe that walking through the streets of a new place that you are visiting for the first time might always give you the chance to see things that you did not have in the place, making the whole thing much more interesting.

If you are going to stay at Clones for any reason and want something else to do, you could enjoy visiting county Fermanagh, since it shares its border, and check some of the things that it could offer you as well. From those places which we have already been to and which we could recommend, there is the Enniskillen Castle Museum ( the Pollnagollum Cave in Enniskillen as well ( you might also visit a place that gives you the chance to enjoy Lough Erne ( check the Headhunters Barber Shop and Railway Museum ( or else visit Blakes of the Hollow pub in order to check the fourth door in Game of Thrones movie series if you happen to be a fan (

Sometimes the place we tend to visit might not carry much for us to see and explore, but we also believe that the more we search and walk through the streets, the more we will find and discover, and that is exactly the tip we want to give to all those travelers out there: never stop walking through the streets and you will never stop discovering new things.

Have you ever visited Clones in county Monaghan before to check any of these historical places we have been to and shared?

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Exploring Carrickmacross Town in IRELAND

Carrickmacross (Irish: Carraig Mhachaire Rois, meaning 'rock of the wooded plain') is a town in County Monaghan, Ireland. The town and environs had a population of 5,032 according to the 2016 census, making it the second-largest town in the county. Carrickmacross is a market town which developed around a castle built by the Earl of Essex in 1630. The town won the European Entente Florale Silver Medal Award in 1998. The local Gaelic football and hurling club is Carrickmacross Emmets. The local soccer team is Carrick Rovers.
FOUNDATION AND DEVELOPMENT
Carrickmacross is a market town which developed around a castle built by the Earl of Essex in 1630. The Convent of St Louis now stands on the original castle site, as the castle itself was destroyed in the late 17th century during the Williamite Wars.
The town developed further as a market town during the 18th century, and a number of large municipal and religious buildings were built to serve the growing population during the 19th century. The town experienced population decline in mid- to late-19th century, during the Great Famine, with the population decreasing from 2,063 in 1861 to 1,779 inhabitants by 1891. The town's Poor Law Union Workhouse and Fever Hospital were built in this period - the latter later becoming the offices of the Urban District Council which was originally formed in 1899.
BUILT HERITAGE
Among the historic buildings in the town is the Roman Catholic church which was completed in 1866 and is dedicated to Saint Joseph. It contains ten stained-glass windows which were designed by the artist Harry Clarke in 1925. The town's Church of Ireland church, dedicated to Saint Finbarr, is older, and was built c.1770 before being remodelled c.1845.
Magheross Church, located on the outskirts of the town, is also of historical interest, and originally dates from c.1550. Other notable buildings include the Carrickmacross Courthouse (built in 1837) and the restored Poor Law Union Workhouse (built in 1841).
The grave of Patrick Byrne (1794–1863), the last major exponent of the Gaelic harp and the first Irish traditional musician ever photographed, is in the area.
LACEMAKING
The town is known for the lace bearing its name. Carrickmacross lace is worked in an individual style, devised by Mrs Grey Porter, wife of the rector of Donaghmoyne, who introduced it in 1820. When she left the district the teaching of Carrickmacross lacemaking was continued by Miss Reid of Rahans, but it was only after the Great Famine in 1846, when a lace school was set up by the managers of the Bath and Shirley estates at Carrickmacross as a means of helping their starving tenants, that the lace became known and found sales.
Subsequently, the lacemaking declined, but in the last decade of the 19th century the Sisters of St Louis founded their own lace school to revive the craft, and this was quite profitable for several years. Although the outbreak of the 1914–18 war marked the virtual end of commercial production of hand-made lace in Europe, the lace school kept the technique alive throughout most of the 20th century. In 1984 the St Louis Sisters assisted in the formation of the Carrickmacross Lace Co-operative, which maintains the tradition to this day.
LUFTWAFFE ATTACK
Although Ireland was neutral during World War Two, there were some incidents during the period. On 20 December 1940, as well as two bombs falling on Sandycove in Dublin, two more fell on Shantonagh near Carrickmacross, causing minor damage to house property.
TRANSPORT
Carrickmacross railway station opened on 31 July 1886, closed for passenger traffic on 10 March 1947, and finally closed altogether on 1 January 1960.

#Town #Towns #Ireland #ExploreIreland
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EMYVALE Town in IRELAND

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Emyvale, known before the Plantation of Ulster as Scarnageeragh (Irish: Scairbh na gCaorach, meaning 'shallow ford of the sheep'), is a village and townland in the north of County Monaghan, Ireland. It is on the main Dublin to Derry and Letterkenny road, the (N2), about 10 km (6 miles) north of Monaghan and 8 km (5 miles) south of Aughnacloy. Its population is about 700.
HISTORY
In 1959, a Bronze Age tomb was discovered which proved that there was a settlement at the site of the village more than 3,000 years ago. Unfortunately for historians, the urn and other artifacts found were inadvertently destroyed during excavation of the tomb.
The name Scairbh na gCaorach (the Irish language name for Emyvale) means 'shallow ford of the sheep', referring to a low (and easily traversable) point in the Mountain Water river on which Emyvale is situated.
The name is thought to have come from the Ui Meith tribe, the village's first inhabitants. Scairbh na gCaorach was abbreviated to Scarna in the early part of the 19th Century (indeed a local hostelry bears this name), although this fell out of common usage and village is now referred to by its English language name – Emyvale. In the 8th century, the McKenna Clan arrived and, by the 12th century, they had established an independent túath or kingdom in North Monaghan which would last for the next 450 years.
In more recent times, Emyvale was immortalised by the renowned 19th-century Irish writer William Carleton as part of his Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry series, which included The Fair of Emyvale (a short story based upon Carleton's experiences of the north Monaghan landscape where he was educated as a young man at a 'hedge school' situated beside St Mary's chapel, Glennan, near Glaslough).

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