The first stone castle was built on site in the 1190s by the Anglo-Norman knight Philip De Prendergast and his wife Maud. Philip, Maud and their Norman descendants resided at the castle until the 1370s.
Art MacMurrough Kavanagh attacked Enniscorthy Castle in the 1370s, in an attempt to regain his ancestral land. Art was successful, taking it in battle from the last Norman knight and owner of the castle, and the MacMurrough Kavanagh dynasty then held the castle until 1536, when they surrendered the castle and surrounding lands to the saxon
Lord Leonard Grey. Enniscorthy Castle was partially burnt by the
Earl of Kildare in 1569. In 1581, Queen
Elizabeth I handed the land to poet
Edmund Spenser, though he never took up residence there. The castle closed for refurbishments in 2006 and reopened in 2011. Today, Enniscorthy Castle explores the development of the castle and the town of Enniscorthy from its earliest French-Norman origins. The castle also houses exhibitions dedicated to its last tenants the Roche family, and a small exhibit to the industrial and commercial heritage of Enniscorthy. ==Features==