Ballina, Ballina, Co. Tipperary

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Ballina, Ballina, Co. Tipperary

Ballina sits on the eastern bank of the River Shannon in County Tipperary, directly across the water from Killaloe in Clare, and the two towns are joined by a single bridge.

It is an arrangement that makes Ballina easy to overlook: visitors crossing into Killaloe, with its cathedral and well-documented Viking-age associations, often pass through Ballina without realising that the Tipperary side has its own layered past compressed into a relatively short stretch of riverfront.

The town is effectively bookended by medieval remains. At its northern end stands Ballina castle, while the southern boundary is marked by two further sites: Cloghaneena castle and the ruins of Templeachally church. That a single small settlement should contain the remnants of two castles and a church points to a place that once carried more strategic and ecclesiastical weight than its current quiet profile might suggest. The documentary record adds a small but telling detail: in 1607, the castle, town, and lands then known as Belanagh in Arra were granted to Murtagh Mc Ibrien under a patent of James I. The place-name Belanagh, an anglicisation of an Irish original, had already been in use long before that date, and the grant itself reflects the wider Plantation-era redistribution of land that reshaped ownership across Munster in the early seventeenth century.

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