The ruins of an Anglo-Norman fortress built over an Early Christian
Irish dún, it was fought over, occupied, fortified, reinforced, seized,
abandoned, and blown up. Today, silhouetted against the Laois skyline,
the stark grandeur of the ruined fastness of Dunamase has the power
still to stir our imaginations.
Plundered by Viking raiders in 843AD, it became the dowry of Aoife, the
bartered daughter of Diarmait Mac Murchada, when she married Richard De
Clare, Strongbow, as the price for the Anglo-Norman invader restoring
Diarmait as king of Leinster.
Fortified by a murder hole, arrow slits, portcullis, drawbridge and high
protecting walls, the struggles between Gaelic Irish versus invading
forces played out around the fortress of Dunamase for centuries. Weapons
and armor, buckles and spurs, gaming pieces and arrowheads, Gaelic
metalwork and medieval coins, all unearthed in excavations, bear witness
to its role as a focal point for critical events in Irish history.