Mellifont Abbey Co Louth Its Ruins And Associations a Guide And Popular His
Mellifont Abbey Co Louth Its Ruins And Associations a Guide And Popular His
Burke Thomas
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Henry II. Granted to the Abbot and community of Mellifont a confirmation of their possessions, and three years later, King John, at that time styled Lord of Ireland, renewed the confirmation while he was residing at Castleknock, during his brief visit to this country, in 1185, the thirty-second year of his father's reign. A copy of the Charter may be seen in the Miscellany of the Archaeological Society, Vol. I. , page 158. The original, which is one of the earliest of the Anglo-Irish documents ...that have come down to us, is preserved in Trinity College, Dublin. By this Charter King John confirmed to the monks of Mellifont the "donation and concession" which his father made to them. By it he confirmed to the monks " the site and ambit of the abbey, with all its appurtenances, namely, the grange of Kulibudi (not on the Ordnance map), and Munigatinn (Monkenewtown), with its appurtenances, the granges of Mell and Drogheda (in Irish Droichet-atha, that is, bridge of the ford) and their appurtenances, and Rathmolan (Rathmullen) and Finnaur (Femor), with their appurtenances, the grange of Teachlenni (Stalleen), and the grange of Kossnarrigh (Rossnaree), with their appurtenances, the townland of Culen (CuUen) and its appurtenances, the grange of Cnogva (Knowth), the grange of Kelkalma (not known now), with their appurtenances, Tuelacnacornari (not known), and Callan (Collon), with their appurtenances, and the grange of Finna ( ) with its appurtenances.
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