Period Property For Sale: Cork

Castle Pook, Doneraile, Co. Cork
A castle on five acres with a Shakespearean connection in North Cork

Castle Pook is a large five-storey tower house on five acres. It is situated on a flat rocky outcrop at the foothills of the Ballyhoura Mountains. The castle dates from around 1380 and is located near Doneraile in North County Cork. The tower is 42 x 30 ft. at the base with thick (at least 6 ft.) battered walls.

The castle is set in what appears originally to have been a Norman or Celtic lios, double ramparted, and so on a plateau of rock above the surrounding area the castle has a wide sweep of the mountains on almost three sides. At the north there is a natural drop and rock defence. The entry door is at the east. There was a porters lodge to the right of the entry and spiral stairs broken down in comparatively recent times but the fine work of the spiral shaft can still be admired.

It is possible only to climb to the eye level of the first storey where there is a mural passage, with an equally fine arched roof running along to the east side, from which entries were to the main rooms. On the east is a cross-shaped slit window as well as the normal slit windows which are on either side and at the north-west corner there is a most unusual slit window at the meeting of the walls. A full 67 page Archaeological Report is available on request from Premier Properties Ireland (details at bottom of page).

The History
The Castle is recorded to have been built by Geoffrey the Red of the Norman family of Synan in 1380. Father JA Gaughan traces the origin of the family of one Sinad who arrived in Ireland with Strongbow, and to David FitzAdam Synan who arrived in the Doneraile district in the 13th century and in 1251 held land at Castlepook at a rent of a pound of pepper a year. This rent had not altered in 1541, nearly 300 years later. The family seemed to have run into financial problems by the 16th century. Ames Reagh Synan of Castle Poyky obtained a pardon in 1573 in consideration of debts due to the crown, and Patrick of Castelfowke received a similar pardon in 1601.

In 1636 Nicholas Synan sold much of his land to St Leger for 300 and in 1639 we find St Leger 'In regard to his more ancient right' (the Synans had been there 400 years!) getting a grant from Charles I. Richard Morgan died at Castle Pook aged 106 in 1748. He had been clerk of the Court of Peace for the county in the time of James II. He never ate salt with his meat and died of no other complaint than the mere effect of his age. He was buried in Buttevant Friary. Philip Morgan, who was there in 1750 may have been the last to reside in the castle, although Richard Andrews is described as of Castle Pooky in 1814. Lord Roche was apparently the head landlord and chief rent out of the property was due to him, as appears in the details of a regrant to him by James I in 1611. The Roches lost their lands in 1641, so title would have passed to the St Legers. The last mention of the Synans in regard to the property seems to be in the Egmont MSS when Shinan FitzRobert of Castlepooke is named as one of the warders of Liscarroll.

Legends
As may be anticipated from the name there are a number of legends attached to the castle and these seem mainly to emanate from the nearby large cave (Castlepook or Mammoth Cave), which is described as having been inhabited by the Pooka, or by a good natured giant who secretly ground corn at night for the people of the neighbourhood. If they left it outside the door, they would find it outside neatly ground in the morning, but he did not like to be seen, and after one nosey parker had stayed awake in order to catch a glimpse of him, he disappeared and was not seen again. A variant of the story is that no effort should be made to thank the spirit, or giant, but in spite of this the master of the castle feeling grateful left a new suit of clothes for him. The giant did not appear on the following nights and was eventually found doing no work because he spent the time admiring himself in his new clothes in a mirror. The idea of such a spirit working surreptitiously for the people and disappearing when seen is not unknown on the continent and has been recorded by the Brothers Grimm. From The Castles of County Cork. James N. Healy, Mercer Press, Cork and Dublin, 1988.

Edmund Spencer and Shakespeare Connection
The castle and its legends about the pooka may be the source of the name Puck which Shakespeare gave the spirit Robin Goodfellow in A Midsummer Nights Dream. The poet Edmund Spenser lived at Kilcolman, just three miles away, so of course he knew the castle and the legends attached to it (more, he was involved with lawsuits against the Synons). Spenser introduced the word Pook to the English in his poem, the Epithalamium – 'ne let the Pook, nor other evil sprites… Pray us with things that not be' - which he wrote to mark his marriage, and which first appeared in early 1595. English scholars acknowledge that Shakespeare took Puck from Spensers Pook, but they seem largely unaware of Spensers likely inspiration, Castle Pook.

Price: €249,000
Last update: 3rd April 2012
Contact: Helen Cassidy, Premier Properties Ireland
Tel.: +353 (0)94 954 6868
Mobile: +353 (0)87 2463748
Email: helencassidyauctioneers@eircom.net

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