Louth, County Louth

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Louth Village (Irish: )[1] lies in the heart of County Louth, Ireland, roughly 8 km south-west of the town of Dundalk.

The county takes its name from the village, which was once an important town. The original Irish name for both village and county was Lughbhaidh but today it is standardised and simplified as .

It is home to the St Mochtas House, which according to legend was built in a night by fairies for St Mochtas, circa 500AD, and to St Mary's Abbey, Louth, a 12th-century monastery, which now lies in ruins.

Until early in the 21st century, the village was also home to the last remnants of St John's Abbey. The last standing portion of the walls of the monastery, a 12-foot (3.7 m) high, four foot wide piece known locally as The Pinnacle, suddenly collapsed overnight.

The Church of the Immaculate Conception, Louth

At the heart of the village is the Church of the Immaculate Conception, which was built in 1892, and sits atop a hill overlooking the village and surrounding area. It was destroyed in 2003 by an accidental fire, started during renovation work, leaving only the exterior walls and spire standing. In early 2006, it reopened with the exterior virtually identical to how it was, but with a modern-style interior.

The population has soared in the last decade, with a constant programme of building of new homes in and around the village. In 2002, it had a population of 514, an increase of 28 per cent in just six years. [2]

In the village centre are four pubs, two shops, and a chip shop.

The village is home to the former TD for Louth, Eddie Filgate.

[edit] References

For information on holy wells in Louth Parish see also; The Holy Wells of County Louth, by Larry Conlon in County Louth Archaeological and Historical Society Journals: Vol. XXIV, No.3, 1999 and Vol. XXIV, No. 4, 2000

See also==

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 53°57′N 6°32′W / 53.95, -6.533

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