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Barbavila Manor

During the last century, the Barbavila House & Estate provided employment in the area. Houses, farm buildings, and animal dwellings were built from stone for employees throughout the immediate surroundings of Barbavilla in and around Collinstown. These stone houses, the old school, and farm buildings are protected through local heritage conservation laws. The notable feature of these buildings of stone is the roofing tile baked from local red coloured clay, which was manufactured within the Barbavilla estate.[3] Some of these remaining buildings are identified by the small moss-green circles. [1] Barbavilla is now an industrial complex for automotive parts.

Commerce & industry

Since 1964, the IRALCO Irish Aluminum Company situated in the Barbavilla Estate have made automotive parts for major European car companies, employing personnel locally. Other local industries include Goats cheese production, electrical and plumbing.[citation needed]

Description

Population (2006) Collinstown (Irish: Baile na gCailleach) is an expanding village in County Westmeath, situated on the R395 regional road 18 km northeast of the county town of Mullingar. Collinstown is in St Mary's (Roman Catholic) parish and has a population of approaching 700.

History

Collinstown has been an inhabited area from pre-Christian times, as the presence of a number of Ringforts[1] and other historic relics testifies. Though some are now overgrown they may be seen on the high ground surrounding Lough Lene. The area contains ancient burial-grounds associated with Saint Colman who was responsible for 7 early Christian cells, of which Lene and Carric are in the vicinity of Collinstown. Christian mass paths, and styles by which pilgrims travelled on foot through fields to Sunday mass date date from the penal times. Turgesius the Viking had a fortress built nearby, upon the main Lough Lene Island. These and other historical relics are clearly marked on the Ordnance Survey of Ireland (OSi) maps numbers 41 & 42. West of Collinstown (in Ranaghan area, south-west of Lough Lene) are the remains of different ringforts. At least one of these is attributed to the Viking, Turgesius. They were likely placed on the high ground overlooking the lake, for defensive purposes. Legend has it that Turgesius dwelled here before being killed by Máel Sechnaill mac Maíl Ruanaid[2] on Melaghlins instruction. In addition to this fort, Turgesius also had another upon the biggest island of Lough Lene which still today bears his name, Turgesius Island. Collinstown also has historic links with several religious orders: the Irish name Baile na gCailleach is based on an association with the convent on the second island on Lough Lene. Nearby, to the north is the village of Fore and the religious and monastic complex of Fore Abbey.

Name

The old Irish name of this village, translated means town of the veiled women. In the past the town was referred to irreverently as "the town of the hags" because there was once a convent established on the Nun's island of nearby Lough Lene. Collinstown was known in the past as Maypole.

See also

* List of towns and villages in Ireland

Sport activities

Bathing, Sailing, wind-surfing, authorised fishing,[4] and jetty facilities are available at the Collinstown lake access point named locally as "The Cut" [5] about 2km north of the village. The Pitch and putt club of Collinstown is also popular. The most successful local sporting organisation is the Lough Lene Gaels Hurling club. The club has won the Westmeath Senior Hurling Championship on seven occasions since 1975 and have been runners-up on five occasions. Ballycomoyle Gaelic football club and Castlepollard Celtic Football Club are also in the area.

The Lough Lene Bell

In 1882, the Royal Irish Academy was presented with the Bell of Lough Lene by the Barbavila estate proprietor, Mr. William Barlow Smythe. The bell had been discovered in Lough Lene the previous year by a boy fishing for eels on Castle Island, which was owned by Smythe at the time. Given the close proximity to the Fore Abbey, the estate owner Smythe concluded that the bell possibly belonged to the St Feichin Abbey; During the Viking and Anglo-Norman oppressions, it may have been transferred to Nun's Island, before being eventually being hidden upon Castle Island. The Bell has a faint outline of the Christian Celtic cross upon opposing sides and has an ornamental peripheral border. Smythe pronounced that ornamentation was generally reserved for the cases or shrines for that era and was therefore most unusual. The bell appears similar to two other bells from that early Christian period. These had been found in Bangor, County Down in the year 1832, and another in Cashel, County Tipperary in 1849. Smythe, the Barbavila owner, believed that the Lough Lene Bell was contemporary to these other 7th century bells, supporting his theory that it was possible that it could have been a relic of St. Feichins. The Folklore Commission[citation needed] also hold an account of Kit "the Blade" Fagan's discovery of the bell, which consequentially triggered a local treasure hunt for further artifacts around Collinstown and Fore. While the original Lough Lene Bell remains within the National Museum, a half sized replica holds a place of pride as the Ceann Comhairle's Bell in Dáil Éireann. This replica was presented to the Dáil in 1931 by the widow of Major Bryan Cooper, a former member of the House.