Geroid Castle, Knockfennell, Co. Limerick

Geroid Castle, Knockfennell, Co. Limerick

On a small rocky island in Lough Gur, County Limerick, stand the ruined remains of what locals call Geroid Castle, though its true origins remain shrouded in mystery.

Geroid Castle, Knockfennell, Co. Limerick

The island itself tells a fascinating story of changing water levels and hidden history; when the lake was drained by 1.5 metres around 1839, what had been a tiny 30-metre islet suddenly expanded to reveal a much larger landmass measuring 170 metres north to south. This dramatic transformation exposed not just more land, but an enormous accumulation of bones, with more than a hundred cart-loads removed and sold to dealers, hinting at the island’s long and possibly grim past.

The castle ruins consist of a circular stone platform about 40 metres across, topped with the remains of a mortared wall that follows the circumference in straight sections, creating a polygonal enclosure. Though the structure is now largely collapsed and overgrown, with only traces of sunken rooms and a few surviving quoin stones, historical accounts suggest this was once a formidable fortification. In 1599, during the Desmond Rebellions, the Earl of Desmond seized the island from Queen Elizabeth’s forces, and by 1600, Sir George Carew reported it housed John Fitz Thomas with at least 200 men, describing it as “a place of exceeding strength” surrounded by deep water.



Local legend adds another layer to the island’s mystique, claiming it as the domain of Garret Fitzgerald, the rebel Earl of Desmond, whose ghost is doomed to ride across the lake’s surface on a horse with silver shoes once every seven years until the shoes wear away and he can return to life. Archaeological excavations have revealed that human activity here stretches back much further than any medieval castle; significant Neolithic and Bronze Age settlement sites have been uncovered both on the island and the nearby Knockadoon peninsula, along with a causeway connecting the island to the shore. Today, visitors can still make out the circular platform that forms the castle’s core, a testament to centuries of human occupation on this small but historically rich island.

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Cleary, R. 2018 The archaeology of Lough Gur. Dublin. Wordwell. Lynch, J.F. 1913 Antiquarian remains at Lough Gur. Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society 19, 8-22. Harkness, R. Prof. 1869 The prehistoric antiquities of and around Lough Gur. Quarterly Journal of Science, 388-96. O’Kelly, M.J. 1944 A survey of the antiquities in the barony of Small County, Co. Limerick. North Munster Antiquarian Journal 4, 16-53. Lynch, J. F. 1895 Lough Gur. Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society 1, 241-258, 289-302. Liversage, G. D. 1958 An Island Site at Lough Gur. Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, 88, (1), 67-81. Ó Ríordáin, S.P. 1954 Lough Gur excavations: Neolithic and Bronze Age houses on Knockadoon. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 56C, 297-460. Lenihan, M. 1866 Limerick: its history and antiquities. Lewis, S. 1837 A topographical dictionary of Ireland, 2 vols. London. Lewis and Co. Westropp, T.J. 1906-7 The ancient castles of the county of Limerick. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 26, 54-264. Wood-Martin, W.G. 1886 (Reprint 1983) The lake dwellings of Ireland: or ancient lacustrine habitations of Erin, commonly called crannogs. Dublin. Hodges, Figgis and Co.
Knockfennell, Co. Limerick
52.5177334, -8.53248517
52.5177334,-8.53248517
Knockfennell 
Masonry Castles 

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