Glanworth

Glanworth (Irish: GleannĂșir, meaning 'yew valley')[2] is a village on the R512 regional road in County Cork, Ireland.

[6] The 13th-century Glanworth Castle was built beside the River Funshion by the Condon family, Norman settlers who arrived in the Cork area in the twelfth century.

The priory's gable tracery window, now restored, was once part of the Protestant church, which is located in the Catholic graveyard.

[9] Glanworth mill, built in the mid-19th century, is located along the banks of the River Funshion and sits below the Norman castle.

Built during the 1840s as part of a famine relief scheme, it is home to one of the last remaining reverse undershot water wheels in Ireland.

Glanworth Castle
Glanworth Bridge over the River Funshion