Kilcloon or Kilclone () is a parish situated in the south-east of County Meath in Ireland. Kilcloon parish is largely rural and contains the village of Kilcloon itself and the neighbouring villages of Batterstown and Mulhussey. The parish church is located at Ballynare Cross Roads in the village of Kilcloon with chapels in Kilcock and Batterstown.
The Central Statistics Office also defines Kilcloon as a built up area (or "urban area") with a population of 280 at the 2016 census. The census town encompasses a much larger area than the village (See Maps below).
The modern parish of Kilcloon approximates to the civil parishes that had by the 19th century replaced the medieval parishes for census and taxation purposes. For instance, Kilclone civil parish does not include Jenkinstown or Barstown townlands.
Kilcloon is also defined as a postal town by An Post, though with the introduction of in 2015, this has been subsumed into the A85 (Dunshaughlin) routing key. Kilcloon postal town only covers a portion of Kilcloon parish (See Maps below).
==Maps==
The Normans under Hugh de Lacy brought about revolutionary changes in the Gaelic Ireland. de Lacy created several baronies in the Kingdom of Meath. The barons in turn established Manorialism and their associated parishes over the course of the following 400 years. Each manor was in turn divided into a number of townlands. The manors of Kilclone (Mulhussey), Balfeighan and Rodanstown were part of the Barony of Deece ruled by the Husseys of Baron Galtrim, whereas the manors of Ballymaglassan and Rathregan were part of the Barony of Ratoath, the personal fiefdom of de Lacy himself. Moyglare was also part of the Barony of Deece but took on a separate identity when Hugh de Hussey handed it back to de Lacy who then gave it to Hugh Tyrell.
The parishes were usually of the same size and boundaries as the manors. Priests and churches were financed by . Control of the parish churches and the income from tithes was given over to the monasteries.
The system of baronies, manors and parishes persisted until the political and religious turmoil in England caused by the Reformation, civil wars and the introduction of the Penal Laws in the 16th and 17th centuries. These events resulted in the confiscation of lands from the barons and the suppression of the Catholic Church. By the 18th century the Husseys had mostly disappeared from the parish and only two manors survived intact: Moyglare and Rathregan. Ballymaglassan never became a manorial centre, but was owned by various lords whose manorial centres were elsewhere. The churches had fallen into ruins.
After the failure of the Reformation in Ireland, the new parish of Kilcloon was created in 1704 as a union of the six medieval parishes and a new "popish priest" was registered.
The remains of many of the medieval parish churches and from the Middle Ages can be found in the parish.
There are three national schools in the parish: Kilcloon, Mulhussey and Rathregan (Batterstown).
A post office is located near Kilcloon village (Kilclone Post Office).
A credit union was established in Kilcloon Parish in 1972. The head office is located in Kilcock with a sub-office in Batterstown.
In 2018, Meath County Council granted permission for a 426 square metre community centre, on a site in the centre of the village of Kilcloon along with permission for the development of 13 sites for people who meet local needs criteria.
The parish is home to the Blackhall Gaels Gaelic football, hurling and camogie club. The club's main grounds are in Batterstown with a second GAA pitch at Collistown. The Collistown grounds are named after Cyril O'Brien, Jack Fitzgerald and John Kelly.
The 11th Meath Kilcloon Scouts meet at Kilcloon National School.
==Gallery==
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