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   » » Wiki: Glanworth
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Glanworth () is a village on the R512 regional road in , Ireland. It lies approximately northwest of the town of and northeast of Cork city. As of 2022, Glanworth's population was 628.

Glanworth has a church, a school, one shop and two pubs. The village is locally known as 'The Harbour'. This is believed to stem from the Latin word, arbor, meaning tree, a reference to three oak trees that grew in Market Square and were a popular meeting place for locals. The village is in a and civil parish of the same name. Glanworth is within the Cork East Dáil constituency.


Built heritage

Labbacallee megalithic tomb
Dated to the early Bronze Age, Labbacallee wedge tomb is located from Glanworth and is the largest in Ireland.


Glanworth Castle
The 13th-century was built beside the by the Condon family, settlers who arrived in the Cork area in the twelfth century. The keep and the castle wall remain. The castle is now used mainly as a public walk.


Glanworth Abbey
Glanworth Abbey was also built in the 13th century, next to the castle, by the . The was desecrated in the 16th century. The priory's window, now restored, was once part of the Protestant church, which is located in the Catholic graveyard.


Glanworth Bridge
Built in the mid-17th century, Glanworth Bridge is a narrow 13-arch bridge, and one of the oldest remaining examples in the region. According to , it is said to be the "narrowest and oldest public bridge in everyday use" in Europe.


Glanworth Mill
Glanworth mill, built in the mid-19th century, is located along the banks of the River Funshion and sits below the Norman castle. Built during the 1840s as part of a famine relief scheme, it is home to one of the last remaining reverse undershot water wheels in Ireland. It was first operated as a woollen mills by the Daly family (who relocated to the Ardfinnan Woollen Mills) and later by Messrs John F Quinlan & Company.


Transport
Glanworth railway station opened on 23 March 1891, closed for passenger and goods traffic on 27 January 1947 and finally closed altogether on 1 December 1953.

Because of its historical status as a town, it is at the convergence point of a number of minor roads.


Sport
The village has men's and women's Gaelic Athletic Association teams with a tradition in . In November 2009, 's intermediate football team won the Cork Junior A Football Championship for the third time in their history, beating .

Glanworth is also home to the 105th Scout Group (


Film
Several scenes from the 1999 film Felicia's Journey were shot on location in Glanworth.


See also
  • List of towns and villages in Ireland
  • List of abbeys and priories in Ireland (County Cork)
  • List of townlands in the barony of Condons and Clangibbon

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