In Photos and Words

Posts tagged ‘Saint Malachy’

Mellifont Abbey

Irelands First Cistercian Monastery

Lavabo - where the monks washed their hands

Lavabo – where the monks washed their hands

Founded in 1142 on the orders of Saint Malachy, Archbishop of Armagh, Mellifont Abbey sits on the banks of the River Mattock, some ten km (6 miles) north-west of Drogheda  (Old Abbey directions).

By 1170, Mellifont had one hundred monks and three hundred lay brothers. The Abbey became the model for other Cistercian abbeys built in Ireland, with its formal style of architecture imported from the abbeys of the same order in France; it was the main abbey in Ireland until it was closed in 1539, when it became a fortified house.

New Abbey

New Abbey

In 1603 the Treaty of Mellifont was agreed between the English Crown and Hugh O’Neill, Earl of Tyrone in the abbey grounds.

William of Orange used Mellifont Abbey House as his headquarters during the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

Mellifont Abbey is now a ruin. Little of the original Abbey remains, save a 13th-century lavabo (where the monks washed their hands before eating), some Romanesque arches and a 14th-century chapter house.

New Mellifont Abbey is home to the Cistercian Order in County Louth and is located in Collon, a small village and townland in the south west corner of County Louth, Ireland on the N2 national primary road (New Abbey Directions).

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