Castle, Ballinacurra, Co. Limerick

Castle, Ballinacurra, Co. Limerick

The exact spot where Ballinacurra Castle once stood in County Limerick remains something of a mystery, though local historians suspect that Ballinacurra House may have been built directly on top of the medieval castle's foundations.

Castle, Ballinacurra, Co. Limerick

The castle, also known as Dewlish or Béal Átha na Cora in Irish, appears in various historical records from the late 16th and early 17th centuries. Thomas Arthur, who died in 1590, held the castles of Reibogg, Delishe, and Ballywiline, whilst his descendant Nicholas Arthur maintained ownership of Dwylish, Rathmichell, and Crewe Iwally between 1633 and 1634. By 1624, Sir William Parsons had taken possession of what records call “Dewlishe or Beallancor Castle.”

The castle’s decline is well documented in the Civil Survey of 1654-56, which describes it as a “broken castle & a Mill seate” belonging to Thomas Arthur, a Limerick alderman and “Irish papist” who had recently died. This survey places the ruined structure near a mill site on the brook Corkanrye, suggesting the castle played a role in the area’s economic life. Maps from the 17th century Down Survey show the castle as a tower house standing close to a bridge over the Ballynaclogh River, with a watermill nearby; a typical arrangement for Anglo-Norman fortifications that needed both defensive positioning and economic viability.



When comparing these historical maps with the 1840 Ordnance Survey, the location of Ballinacurra House corresponds remarkably well with where the castle appears on the earlier Down Survey maps. This alignment strengthens the theory that the later house was indeed built on the castle’s original site, though without archaeological excavation, the precise relationship between the two structures remains speculative. The castle’s various names in the historical record; Dewlish, Ballinacurra, Beallancor, and Beallnacorrie; reflect the linguistic complexity of post-medieval Ireland, where English administrators often struggled to render Irish place names into written form.

Rated 0 out of 5

Good to Know

Tags

Visitor Notes

Review type for post source and places source type not found
Added by
Picture of IrishHistory.com
IrishHistory.com
IrishHistory.com is passionate about helping people discover and connect with the rich stories of their local communities.
Please use the form below to submit any photos you may have of Castle, Ballinacurra, Co. Limerick. We're happy to take any suggested edits you may have too. Please be advised it will take us some time to get to these submissions. Thank you.
Name
Email
Message
Upload images/documents
Maximum file size: 50 MB
If you'd like to add an image or a PDF please do it here.

Hibernia Regnum: A set of 214 barony maps of Ireland dating to the period AD 1655-59. The original parish maps have been lost but the Hibernia Regnum maps are preserved in the Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris (Goblet 1932, v-x). Photographic facsimiles of these maps were published by the Ordnance Survey, Southampton in 1908. NLI, MS 718 – National Library of Ireland, Parish maps with terriers, showing forfeited lands in County Limerick, commonly known as the “Down Survey”, executed under the direction of Sir William Petty, 1657, and copied by Daniel O’Brien, 1786. Westropp, T.J. 1906-7 The ancient castles of the county of Limerick. Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 26, 54-264. Simington, R.C. (ed.) 1938 The civil survey, AD 1654-1656. Vol. IV: county of Limerick, with a section of Clanmaurice barony Co. Kerry. Dublin. Irish Manuscripts Commission.
Ballinacurra, Co. Limerick
52.644499, -8.64703545
52.644499,-8.64703545
Ballinacurra 
Masonry Castles 

Related Places