Church of the Rath Killeshandra County Cavan
Killeshandra Tidy Towns Committee applied to adopt the historic church known as Church of the Rath Killeshandra. It is from this church that the town takes its name.
Killeshandra Tidy Towns Committee applied to adopt the historic church known as Church of the Rath Killeshandra. It is from this church that the town takes its name.
Ireland’s industrial heritage is represented in the Adopt a Monument Scheme by a community from picturesque Glenmalure, County Wicklow, who applied to adopt the large nineteenth century ore crusher building at Baravore.
It stands as a testament to the hard working miners and entrepreneurial pioneers who sought to delve into the rich natural resources that lay hidden in the valleys.
The local community group led by volunteers from Waterford County Museum submitted a joint application with Lismore for their two medieval forts to the Adopt a Monument Ireland scheme. The communities of Dungarvan and Lismore in County Waterford joined together as part of a combined application to adopt two medieval forts in their localities.
Round Hill Lismore County Waterford is spectacularly sited along the banks of the River Blackwater, just outside Lismore Heritage Town.
The extensive eighteenth century Mountbellew Walled Garden was once part of the large Bellew estate and dates back to the Eighteenth Century.
Kilbarron Castle is a medieval castle and the birthplace of Mícheál Ó Cléirigh located near Ballyshannon in the south of County Donegal.
Knockboy medieval church is a fine example of a medieval parish church, and it is located in a rural setting in County Waterford.
This large Anglo-Norman motte appears to stand on the site of a significant early medieval ringfort. T

The Heritage Resource Guide compiles a range of online heritage resources. This include archives, digital collections, data bases and inventories, GIs applications, video, mobile apps, most of which can be accessed freely on personal devices.
It covers numerous subjects e.g. archaeology and history, architecture, coastal and marine, habitats and species, museums and collections.
If you notice that a favourite resource of yours is not included, please let us know. This Guide is a living, expanding list. It was compiled as part of the Heritage Council's contribution to the European Year of Cultural Heritage 2018.
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