Laois Heritage Trail

Timahoe

Timahoe Biodiversity Project 2022

During 2022 in partnership with the Laois Offaly Branch of the Irish Wildlife Trust and with funding from the local Biodiversity Action Fund, a project was rolled out at Timahoe to improve the site’s habitats for wildlife and to raise awareness of biodiversity among the local community. The project involved mowing of vegetation on the site to benefit pollinators, installation of bird nest boxes and bat roost boxes, and installation of interpretive panels about the varied wildlife using the buildings and stream at the site.

Timahoe Panel Stream

 

Timahoe Panel Doorway

 

Timahoe Early Christian Site

An extraordinary carved doorway makes this the most elegant round tower in Ireland. Carvings of human heads, with flowing beards and moustaches, decorate the main entrance, almost five metres from the ground. Smaller carvings decorate a second storey window. No one knows why the monks at Timahoe carved such a beautiful doorway. They may have used it to display a sacred relic to pilgrims, or the elegant decoration could reflect the monastery buildings that have disappeared from this site.

The round tower was built some time in the 12th century, on the site of a religious community founded by St. Mochua around the year 600. The tower rises almost 30 metres high and is more than 20 metres wide at its base. The tower made it easy for travellers to find the monastery. Bells would be rung to call the monks to prayer, and to signal when the monastery was under attack. When the alarm sounded, monks would grab all the treasures of the monastery and scramble into the tower. Once they had drawn up the outside ladder and bolted the door, the thick stone walls kept them safe.

The tower stands in a lovely setting across a footbridge that crosses the Timahoe River. Nearby, the former Church of Ireland was once used as a library and now a community-run heritage centre, with facilities for visitors. Just across from the site is a children's’ playground.

Timahoe Monastic Site Conservation Plan

A Conservation Plan for the monastic site of Timahoe, funded by the Heritage Council and Laois County Council, was written by a team led by conservation architect Margaret Quinlan, with archaeologist Dave Pollock, ecologist Fiona MacGowan, art historian Rachel Moss, architect Aighleann O Shaughnessy and representatives of the local community.

Conservation Plans are are tool for gathering together all the information on a site, assessing its heritage significance, highlighting and issues and proposing management of change into the future. The plan for Timahoe drew together all the stakeholders on the site (Local authority, community, Church of Ireland and Office of Public Works) to define how best to work together to develop, protect and present the site to visitors.

The plan was published in 2018 and is available to download below. Hard copies are available to purchase at Timahoe Heritage Centre.

St Mochua’s Desk Sculpture

A sculpture by Laois-based artist Michael Burke in the tower grounds was commissioned by the local primary school. Entitled Mochua’s Desk, it depicts St. Mochua and the three pets in a famous story about the saint: a rooster who woke him, a mouse who nibbled his ear if he fell asleep while praying, and a fly that stopped at the word Mochua stopped on when reading his prayers.

Timahoe Church

 

Laois Heritage Trail and Ireland’s Ancient East

Laois Monastic Trail Audio Guide