Aghaboe can refer to
Aghaboe is a hamlet in County Laois, Ireland. It is located on the R434 regional road in the rural hinterland west of the town of Abbeyleix.
Aghaboe, or Aughavoe, is a civil parish in County Laois. It lies partly in the barony of Clarmallough and partly in the barony of Clandonnagh.
St. Canice is a Church of Ireland church in the hamlet of Aghaboe in County Laois and is named after St Canice, the founder of the Abbey of Aghaboe, whose ruins are adjacent. It belongs to the parish of Rathdowney in the Diocese of Cashel and Ossory. The building retains 13th century pieces from the adjacent ruins of the Augustinian abbey and, according to the website of the diocese, dates from the 19th century; however, the website of Laois county council says that it dates from the 1700s.
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Saint Cainnech of Aghaboe (515/16–600), also known as Saint Canice in Ireland, Saint Kenneth in Scotland, Saint Kenny and in Latin Saint Canicus, was an Irish abbot, monastic founder, priest and missionary during the early medieval period. Cainnech is one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland and preached Christianity across Ireland and to the Picts in Scotland. He wrote a commentary on the Gospels, which for centuries was known as the Glas-Choinnigh or Kenneth's Lock or the Chain of Cainnech.
Kilshanny is a village and a civil parish in west County Clare, Ireland.
Borris may refer to:
Drumbeg is a small village, townland and civil parish on the south bank of the River Lagan in County Down, Northern Ireland. The village is covered by the Lisburn City Council area and forms part of the suburban fringe of Belfast.
Events from the year 1382 in Ireland.
Coolkerry is a civil parish in the barony of Clarmallagh in County Laois. It is separated into two disjoint areas by an arm of Aghaboe civil parish.
Coolkerry is a townland in Coolkerry civil parish in County Laois.
Middlemount is a townland in County Laois.
Aghaboe is a townland in Aghaboe civil parish in County Laois.
Aghaboe, a Roman Catholic parish in County Laois, is one of the parishes of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ossory.
Clough is a village in the civil parish of Bordwell in County Laois. It lies at a point where several townlands and two civil parishes meet.
The Abbey of Aghaboe is one of the most important of the abbeys and priories in County Laois. It was founded in the kingdom of Osraige by St. Canice in the 6th century. In his Vita Sancti Columbae, Adomnán refers to the abbey, saying that its name means a of the cow: "quod Latine Campulus Bovis dicitur, Scotice vero Achadh-bou"
Chapelhill is a townland in County Laois in Ireland. A small part of it (comprising a little over three acres is in the civil parish of Aghaboe but most of it lies in the civil parish of Bordwell. The village of Clough lies in this latter part of the townland.
Adam de Hereford was one of the first generation of Norman colonisers in Ireland.
Crusheen, formerly called Inchicronan, is a Catholic parish in County Clare, Ireland. Inchicronan is also a civil parish, covering the same area. The parish lies to the southwest of Ennis. It contains the village of Crusheen and the ruin of Inchicronan Priory, built in 1190.
Oughtmama is a civil parish in County Clare. It lies in the Burren, a region in the northwest of the county. It contains a large number of antiquities, including three early-medieval Christian churches, ruined castles, prehistoric cairns and ring forts and two Martello Towers built in the early 19th century.
Killeany or Kilhenny, Kilheny is a civil parish in County Clare, Ireland. It lies in the Burren region of the northwest of the county.