Used as a meeting site during Pre-Christian societies, the Curragh is shrouded in mythology. The hill to the north of the Curragh is called the
Hill of Allen (Almhain) and is the purported meeting place of the mythical
Fianna. Legend has it that in about 480 AD, when
St Brigid became intent on founding a monastery in Kildare, she asked the
High King of Leinster for the land on which to build it. When he granted her as much land as her cloak would cover, she then placed her cloak on the ground to cover the entire Curragh plain. On 1 April 1234,
The 3rd Earl of Pembroke lost
a battle at the Curragh against a group of men loyal to
Henry III of England. Lord Pembroke was wounded in the battle and died at his
castle at Kilkenny on 16 April. It was a common site for mustering the armies of
the Pale (see
Essex in Ireland). During the
1798 Rebellion there was a massacre in the Curragh at
Gibbet Rath. The
Curragh Camp is now located there, where the
Irish Defence Forces undergo training. at Donnelly's Hollow At a natural bowl-shaped amphitheatre on the Curragh known locally as Donnelly's Hollow the Irish champion boxer
Dan Donnelly defeated the English champion George Cooper in 1815, before a large crowd. Donnelly had a famed reach and the remains of his arm were on show until recently in the Hideout Pub in the nearby town of
Kilcullen. In 1866, a commission was appointed by the
British Treasury to report into the use made of the Curragh and make recommendations on legislation. It reported in 1868, On 2 January 1941 the Curragh was
bombed by the Luftwaffe, the air force of the
Third Reich, causing slight damage. One SC250 bomb remains unaccounted for. == Legal recognition ==