Drimoleague
Drimoleague is a village on the R586 road at its junction with the R593 in County Cork, Ireland. It lies roughly halfway between the towns of Dunmanway and Bantry, within the civil parish of Dromdaleague. As of the 2022 census of Ireland, Drimoleague had 486 residents.
History
Drimoleague is located in West Cork in the townlands of Baurnahulla and Dromdaleague. Evidence of ancient settlement within these townlands includes a number of ecclesiastical, souterrain, holy well and fulacht fia sites. Other archaeological sites include the Clodagh Standing Stones, a Stone Age site, which lies to the northeast. Castle Donovan, a ruined Irish tower house, is situated approximately to the north.Drimoleague is the start for one of the five Pilgrim Paths of Ireland, St. Finbar's Pilgrim Path, which ends 35-kilometers away in Gougane Barra. A [Church of Ireland|Church of Ireland (COI)] church which was built in 1790, is now in ruin. St. Matthew's, dedicated in 1858, located to the east of the village is the current COI church.The local Methodist church was built. In 1956, a new Catholic church was completed on the site of an older church. Designed by architect Frank Murphy, it is credited as being West Cork's first building in the modernist style.
Drimoleague railway station opened in 1877 on the Cork, Bandon and [South Coast Railway] line. It closed in the early 1960s.
The TV series Holding, based on the similarly titled book by Graham Norton, was filmed in the village and surrounding area in 2021.