Cloheenafishoge Castle, Cloheenafishoge, Co. Tipperary South
On the northern edge of a natural ridge crowning a hill in County Tipperary's rolling pasture lands, the remnants of Cloheenafishoge Castle tell a story of medieval Ireland through little more than a single surviving wall.
Cloheenafishoge Castle, Cloheenafishoge, Co. Tipperary South
This modest fragment, stretching just 7.3 metres long and less than a metre thick, is all that remains above ground of what was once likely a substantial fortified structure. Built from limestone and sandstone rubble, the wall runs north to south, its internal and external faces having long since collapsed or been stripped away by centuries of stone robbing.
The castle’s original footprint becomes clearer from above, where aerial photography reveals the ghostly outline of a roughly square bawn, visible as a cropmark measuring approximately 47 metres north to south and 51 metres east to west. The surviving wall fragment appears to mark the eastern edge of a building that once extended westward, occupying the southeastern corner of this defensive enclosure. Such bawns were typical features of Irish tower houses and castles, providing a walled courtyard where cattle could be secured during raids and serving as an outer defensive perimeter.
First documented on the 1840 Ordnance Survey map as the ‘Site of Cloheenafishoge Castle’, the location had already fallen into ruin by the time of that early cartographic survey. Today, visitors to this quiet hillside will find little to mark the castle’s presence beyond that solitary stretch of masonry, standing as a subtle monument to the countless fortified homes that once dotted the Irish countryside. The combination of archaeological evidence and historical mapping provides tantalising glimpses of the castle’s original form, even as the physical structure itself has largely returned to the landscape from which it was built.





