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- Celebrating Irish Grandparents
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Malahide Castle’s Heartbroken Ghost
IrishShopShare
Ireland is rich in ruins. Ruined castles and monasteries dot the countryside. While images of some feature on Irish gifts, others can look very forlorn particularly in autumn and winter. Many rural churches have a graveyard full of Celtic cross gravestones so old the ground has shifted and left them lurching at strange angles. These are the places most visitors would expect to find a ghost, and indeed, they are likely places to spot a wandering spirit.
Malahide Castle just north of Dublin city never went to ruin. In 1185, King Henry II granted the land to Sir Richard Talbot for his services in the Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland. Talbot built the castle, and his family held it for generations except for a brief period when Cromwell seized it and gave it to one of his henchman, Miles Corbett – who now haunts the grounds. The Talbots regained the castle after Corbett was drawn and quartered, and the family held it until 1975 when the Irish government bought it. Now it is open to visitors, who should keep a sharp eye for ghosts while touring the grounds. Corbett is only one of five known to haunt the grounds. He is known for appearing and then falling to pieces, four pieces to be specific, as he did when he was quartered.