The town has been a centre of population since
Celtic times, probably because of its elevated position offering a view over the surrounding countryside. It is mentioned in the ancient Irish epic, the
Táin Bó Cuailgne, as being one of the places where Queen
Medb and her army stopped on their journey to take the
Donn Cuailnge (the
Brown Bull of Cooley). The name of the village is itself so ancient as to be unclear even in Irish; the 11th-century writers of the
Lebor na hUidre (containing the oldest written version of the
Táin) refer to it by means of a
gloss as "
Gránairud Tethba tuaiscirt .i. Gránard indiu" ("Gránairud of northern Teathbha, i.e. Gránard of today"). According to the
Tripartite Life of Saint Patrick, Patrick appointed
Guasacht, a son of his former master Milchú, as first
bishop of Granard, but the
diocese did not survive as a separate entity. The surname
Sheridan was first recorded in Granard in the 8th century. Granard is known for the
motte built by
Risteárd de Tiúit. It stands 166 m (543 ft) above
sea level, located at the head of the village. A statue of St Patrick was erected on the motte in 1932 to commemorate the 1500th anniversary of the coming of the saint to Ireland for the second time. Due to the location between the three rivers and near
Lough Sheelin, it is also a centre for
trout and coarse
fishing. The Gaynors (Mag Fhionbharra, from Fionnbharr Ó Géaradháin) were once the
Gaelic lords of Granard. Between 1780 and 1787, a large new market house was constructed in the town enhancing Granard's position as a market town for the local area. It was built under the patronage of the local McCartney family. Granard was the location of an annual
Harp festival from 1781 to 1785. This had been due to the financial support of James Dungan, an Irish merchant then residing in
Copenhagen, and a native of Granard, who had heard of similar events being organised in Scotland. Many of the harpists who won prizes at these festivals, including
Charles Fanning,
Arthur O'Neill, and Rose Mooney went on to perform at the
Belfast Harp Festival in July 1792. There has been a revival of the festival since 1981. During the
Irish War of Independence, on 31 October 1920 a
police officer, District-Inspector Philip Kelleher was shot dead by two masked men in the bar of the Greville Arms Hotel, Granard. As a reprisal, a motor convoy of Crown forces entered the village four days later and systematically destroyed some of the main business premises of the town. ==Administration==