Country house, Mondellihy, Co. Limerick
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What makes Mondellihy House quietly interesting is not any single dramatic feature, but the way its present form quietly swallowed an older one.
The house that stands at the northern end of a ridge in County Limerick's pastoral midlands is, on the surface, an early Victorian building, yet it contains within its fabric the bones of an eighteenth-century predecessor. That kind of layered construction, where a later house is built around or over an earlier one rather than replacing it outright, is more common in Ireland than it might seem, and it leaves a site with a physical history that the eye alone cannot easily read.
The paper trail for Mondellihy reaches back further than the building itself. A house in this vicinity is marked on the Down Survey Map of Coshma Barony, the Down Survey being the mid-seventeenth-century mapping project undertaken for the Cromwellian land settlement, one of the most systematic attempts to document Irish landholding before the modern era. The reference appears in Simington's 1938 catalogue of those maps. However, archaeologists who have examined the site have found no physical evidence of any structure of seventeenth-century date or earlier on the ground, which suggests the Down Survey annotation may reflect a nearby property rather than this exact spot. By 1840, the Ordnance Survey six-inch map shows Mondellihy House clearly, annotated by name, as a rectangular building with a linear run of outbuildings to its west. By the time the twenty-five-inch OS edition was published in 1897, the house had grown into a larger structure set within a wider complex. The National Inventory of Architectural Heritage dates the present building to around 1840, with the outbuildings considered part of the original eighteenth-century phase.
The house sits roughly 500 metres east of the River Maigue, which at this point also marks the boundary between baronies, giving the landscape an administrative edge that maps onto its physical one. The ridge setting means the complex is visible from certain approaches across the surrounding pasture. The site includes both historic and more recent buildings, as recorded in aerial imagery from 2011 to 2018, so visitors should expect a working or adapted farmstead rather than a preserved period ensemble. There is no public access indicated, and the interest here is largely one for those following the OS maps or the NIAH record, tracing how a modest country house was documented, expanded, and has continued in use across nearly two centuries.