8:45 am Depart from Lower Abbey Street, Opposite Wynns Hotel
9:00 am Depart Nassau Street, Opposite Kilkenny Design
9:03 am Depart Davenport Hotel, near Merrion Square
9:05 am Depart Merrion Hotel
9:10 am Depart Conard Hotel, Opposite National Concert Hall
9:15 am Depart Burlington Hotel
6:00 pm Arrive back in Dublin
Adult €30 euro
Student/OAP €25 euro
Operates every day of the year
Our Glendalough/Kilkenny tour is run by Extreme Ireland in conjunction with Collins Day Tours. Their tourism experience extends back to 1979-with vast qualifications and experience in customer care, tour guiding, transport logistics, tour management, business management and languages. The emphasis is to provide a high level of quality and service by providing comfortable, spacious, modern coaches for our excursion along with a separate professional driver and qualified tour guide. Reliability is top of the list - we carry out our promises and endeavour to give you the top class tour you expect.
The tour includes a luxury touring coach, dedicated, qualified and approved tour guide, walking tour through the Glendalough Valley, guided tour of Glendalough monastic settlement, guided tour of Kilkenny City, exclusive lunch offer at the Kilkenny Design Centre Restaurant and special offers in Kilkenny with the Kilkenny Culture Yard.
20% off entry fee to many heritage attractions and 20% off selected lines from many of the wonderful Crafts studios throughout County Kilkenny.
20% discount on selected lined in the following Kilkenny Shops:
- Carl Parker Jewels
- Castle Arch Pottery
- Crannmor Pottery
- Cushendale Woollen Mills
- Jackie & Ed Keilthy Jewellery
- Jerpoint Glass
- Ken Foley Kilkenny Leather Workshop
- Millinery by Rebekah Patterson
- Moth to a flame
- Rosemarie Durr Pottery
- Nicholas Mosse Pottery
- Maeve Coulter Print
- Kilkenny Design Centre
Itinerary for your 1 Day tour to Glendalough:
08:45 - 09:15 Depart Dublin
Our full day excursion takes you into the heart of the Wicklow Mountains to Glendalough (Arrive approx 10.15 am) - a 6th century monastic settlement where we visit the monastic ruins (included) with its round tower and time for a walk to the famous lakes.
11:45 Depart Glendalough
13:15 Arrive in the Medieval Capital of Ireland-Kilkenny City, in time for lunch (not included)
Time to explore the City, Castle Gardens and take a guided walking tour of the City(included) through Kilkenny's medieval side streets and visit the 'Black Abbey'
16:15 Depart Kilkenny
Arrive back in Dublin
Glendalough-A Brief History
Glendalough, or the Glen of two Lakes, is one of the most important sites of monastic ruins in Ireland. It is also known as the city of the seven Churches. Fourteen centuries have passed since the death of its founder, St. Kevin, when the valley was part of Ireland's Golden Age.
The two lakes, which gave the valley its name, came into existence thousands of years ago, after the Ice Age, when great deposits of earth and stone were strewn across the valley in the area where the Round Tower now exists. The mountain streams eventually formed a large lake.
The Pollanass River spread alluvial deposits across the centre of the lake and created a divide to form the Upper and Lower Lakes. The Glenealo River flows in from the West into the Upper lake which is the larger and deepest of the two lakes.
Before the arrival of St. Kevin this valley (glen) would have been desolate and remote. It must have been ideal for St Kevin as a retreat and area to be 'away from it all'. Kevin died in 617 A.D. at the age of 120 years and his name and life's work is forever entwine with the ruins and the Glendalough Valley
The recorded history of the wooded valley dates from the 6th century - the dawn of Christianity in Ireland. For 500 years it was one of Ireland's great ecclesiastical foundations and schools of learning. The establishment was attacked, burned and plundered by the Danes, who were based in the stronghold of Dublin, a shortish distance away, and making it an easy target.
Glendalough, despite extensive fire damage in 1163 A.D. prospered until the early 13th century. In 1163, Laurence O'Toole, Abbot of Glendalough, who later became Irelands first canonised saint, was appointed Archbishop of Dublin.
The arrival of the Normans in Ireland sealed the fate of Glendalough, as in 1214 the monastery was destroyed by the invaders and the Diocese of Glendalough was united with the Sea of Dublin. After that, Glendalough declined as a monastic establishment and gradually it became deserted.
The buildings fell into decay and more than 6 hundred years elapsed before a reconstruction program was started in 1878. Further work was carried out in the 20th century Today the valley of Glendalough is extensively wooded and a comprehensive network of walk ways have been completed and continually improved, which provides good access for the visitor and researcher to wonder the valley.
Legends of St Kevin
Legends associated with St. Kevin and the years he spent in the desolate valley of Glendalough are numerous. They have survived in some form through the centuries, and have probably lost some of their origins along the way.
Acta Sanctorum – which is based on an ancient manuscript contains a number of legends. The author of a commentary on this manuscript, Fr. Francis Baert, S.J., explains, “that although many of the legends given to this work are of doubtful veracity; it was decided to let them stand in favour of the antiquity of the document which is placed as having being written during or before the 12th century”.
St Kevin’s birth and early years figure prominently in traditional legends. An angel is said to have appeared as Kevin was about to be baptised and told his parents that the child should be called Kevin. The priest named Cronan who performed the ceremony said, “This was surely an angel of the Lord and as he named the child so shall he be called”. So Kevin received the name which in Latin means pulcher-genitus or the fair-begotten.
When an infant a mysterious white cow came to his parent's house every morning and evening and supplied the milk for the baby. When Kevin was old enough he was put tending sheep. One day some men came to him and begged him to give them some sheep. He was touched by their poverty and gave them four sheep. When evening came, however, and Kevin’s sheep were counted the correct numbers were still there.
Another time one autumn day Kevin was in the kitchen. meals were being prepared for harvesters who were busy gathering crops in the fields when a number of pilgrims called and asked for food. Kevin, filled with compassion, gave them the harvester's dinner.
He was rebuked by his superiors for his action. He then told the attendants to fill all the ale jars with water and gather together all the bare meat bones. Then he prayed alone and, it is said, the water turned to ale and the bones were covered with meat again.
A cure is reported to have occurred when Kevin was at Luggala (on the road to Sallygap). A workman was injured when a chip of stone struck him in one eye and caused his to lose the sight of the eye. Kevin came to the injured man, blessed the eye and the man recovered his sight immediately.
Perhaps the most famous legend is the one about Kathleen of the “eyes of most unholy blue”. She is said to have pursued the handsome Kevin in a bid to captivate him, ignoring the fact that he was bound by holy vows. He became annoyed and repulsed her by beating her with a bunch of nettles. She later sought his forgiveness and is said to have become a very holy woman, noted for her grate sanctity.
Gerald Griffin and Thomas Moore have dramatised this legend in poems.. But the two poems, colourful though they are, appear to be totally imaginative and to have little bearing on the incident. A person of Kevin’s kind nature would hardly be likely to “Hurl the maiden from the rock into the black lake shrieking” as Griffin’s poem suggests. It is equally improbable that Kevin “Hurled her from the beetling rock” into the lake, as indicated in Moore’s verse.
It is said that the lark never sings above the dark waters of Glendaloch. Folklorists say that when the cathedral was being built the labourers and masons agreed to work as long a day as possible and to “rise with the lark and lie with the lamb”.
These long hours soon had the men exhausted and when Kevin investigated he found that the local larks started their day extremely early. He prayed for an answer to the problem and from that day, according to tradition, the skylark ceased singing in Glendaloch.
Wicklow Gap
A scenic drive from the Glendalough Valley rising up to the highest point (Wicklow Gap) while crossing the Wicklow Mountains towards Hollywood.
We drive through the Wicklow Mountains National Park.
Wicklow Mountains National Park covers part of a mountain range that extends over most of County Wicklow on the east coast of Ireland. The upper slopes and rounded peaks are blanketed with heath and bog.
The open vistas are interrupted only by forestry plantations and the winding mountain roads. Fast-flowing streams descend into the deep lakes of the wooded valleys and continue their course into the surrounding lowlands.
The primary purpose of Wicklow Mountains National Park is the conservation of local biodiversity and landscape.
Kilkenny City
Kilkenny's rich medieval heritage is evident in the city's treasure trove of historical buildings and landmarks, exemplified by the magnificent Kilkenny Castle. Kilkenny is arguably the pre-eminent medieval city in Ireland, with the current layout of the city clearly grounded in the city's medieval roots.
However, the city's origins predate the medieval landmarks existing today. Saint Canice founded a monastic settlement in Kilkenny in the sixth century, unfortunately the sole remaining landmark from this settlement is the round tower positioned alongside the cathedral.
Strongbow, the legendary Norman invader, built a fort in the twelfth century on the site where Kilkenny Castle stands today. Subsequent to this event, William Marshall (Strongbow's son-in-law and Earl of Pembroke) oversaw the building and maintenance of fortified city walls thus consolidating the Norman's position of power in the city.
However, it wasn't until the seventeenth century that Kilkenny really entered its golden age. The parliament known as the Confederation of Kilkenny was founded in 1641. One of the parliament's main objectives was to unite resistance against English persecution of Irish Catholics. With the emergence of this parliament, Kilkenny entered a period of unparalleled success. Over time, however, the influence of the Confederation of Kilkenny diminished. Oliver Cromwell's arrival in Kilkenny heralded the dissolution of the parliament, and the city never quite regained the prosperity it had previously been celebrated for.
Fast-tracking to the present, it is important to note that a substantial portion of the landmarks illustrating Kilkenny's medieval past still exist. Allied to this historical heritage, it is important to recognise that the city prides itself on its lively cultural scene, with important events hosted annually in the city. These events include the Arts Week Festival in the last two weeks of August, and the Cats Laughs Festival at the beginning of June. During the Arts Week Festival a variety of classical music events take place, along with art exhibitions, literary reading, jazz & folk sessions, and so on. At the Cats Laughs Festival, celebrated comedians from throughout the world perform in the city's clubs, pubs and theatres.
All in all, a visit to Kilkenny is a richly rewarding experience with a variety of interesting places to see and things to do.