Luddenmore Castle, Ludden More, Co. Limerick
Rising from a pastoral hillside in County Limerick, the ruins of Luddenmore Castle offer a glimpse into Ireland's turbulent medieval past.
Luddenmore Castle, Ludden More, Co. Limerick
What remains today is modest yet evocative: an ivy-wrapped stone stump marking the northwest corner of what was once a rectangular fortification measuring approximately 11 metres east to west and 9 metres north to south. The structure now consists mainly of grass-covered earthen banks, roughly 1.8 metres wide and 1.2 metres high, tracing the original footprint of the castle walls.
The surviving masonry tells its own story of decay and resilience. Most of the exterior facing stones have long since disappeared, likely pilfered for other building projects over the centuries, whilst a substantial chunk of fallen masonry lies just south of the standing corner, perhaps where it tumbled centuries ago. A small wall press, a recessed storage niche common in medieval buildings, can still be spotted on the inner face of the eastern wall; a humble reminder of the domestic life that once animated these defensive walls.
Historical records first mention a castle at this location in the mid-16th century, when it was held by the Burke family, one of the prominent Anglo-Norman families who dominated much of western Ireland following the Norman invasion. According to research by antiquarian Thomas Johnson Westropp in the early 1900s, the Burkes controlled this strategic hilltop position during a period of considerable upheaval, as Gaelic Irish lords and Old English families vied for control of Limerick’s fertile lands. Today, cattle graze where soldiers once stood guard, and the ivy-covered stones stand as a quiet monument to five centuries of Irish history.





