Site of Dungrot Castle, Knockanebrack, Co. Limerick
Standing atop a hill in the townland of Knockanebrack, County Limerick, the fragmentary remains of Dungrot Castle tell a story that stretches back over a thousand years.
Site of Dungrot Castle, Knockanebrack, Co. Limerick
The site first appears in historical records in 1002, when King Brian Boru reportedly repaired the fort of Dungcroit, taking its name from the ancient designation of the nearby Galtee Mountains, once known as Crotta cliach or Sliabh Crot. By the mid-17th century, the castle had evolved into a substantial manor complex; the 1654-56 Civil Survey records that John Cantwell of Galbally, described as an “Irish Papist”, owned the Manor of Dungrot, complete with the castle, a grist mill, a tucking mill, and courts leet and baron.
The castle’s defensive architecture showcases the ingenuity of medieval Irish fort builders in adapting natural features to military advantage. The structure consisted of a tower house set within an elaborate system of earthworks and stone defences. The builders cleverly utilised the site’s natural precipices to the south and east, reinforcing them with dry-stone revetments, whilst carving substantial ramparts and fosses from the landward approaches. The main platform stands 13 feet above the surrounding field, protected by ramparts reaching up to 18 feet in height and 25 feet thick at their base. The upper fort, roughly oval in shape and measuring about 100 by 90 feet, occupies a knoll with dramatic scarps rising 20 to 30 feet, offering commanding views across the glen towards Slievenamuck and the plains of County Tipperary.
Today, only modest fragments survive of what was once a formidable stronghold. The castle tower’s foundation, measuring 15 feet long, 6 feet thick, and standing about 9 feet high, marks the centre of the upper platform. The entrance ramp, 6 feet wide, still rises from the fosse to the platform near two shallow oval depressions that likely indicate the sites of former buildings. Despite its ruined state, the site remains an impressive example of how medieval castle builders integrated natural topography with constructed defences, creating a fortification that controlled this strategic position in the Galtee foothills for centuries.





