Things to see and do Ireland

Things to see or do

Reginalds Tower

Amenities

  • Directions: Located on the quay R683 in Waterford City
  • Opening Hours: Daily; 21st March – 31st October, 9.30 am – 5.30 pm, November – Easter 2014, Wed – Sun: 10 am – 5.30 pm. Last admission half hour before closing.
  • Admission:: Adult: €3, Senior/Group: €2, Child/Student: €1, Family: €8. Admission to OPW sites are free on the first Wednesday of every month until the end of 2013.
  • Access:: Access is limited to the ground floor for people with disabilities.
  • Admission Prices: Admission to Reginalds Tower:  Adults: €3.  Senor/Group: €2.  Child/Student :€1.  Family: €8.  Children under 6 free.

Reginald's Tower

Add to My Ireland Waterford City Waterford - Ireland South

Reginald’s Tower is a circular defence tower, set in Waterford City’s historic Viking Triangle. It was built at the beginning of the 13th century. At various stages in its rich history, Reginald’s Tower has been used as a mint, prison and military store. When the Anglo-Normans attacked Waterford in 1170, the tower was of strategic importance and its capture heralded the fall of the city. The tower derives its name from the Hiberno-Norse, (Irish-Viking) ruler of the city Ragnall MacGillemaire, who was held prisoner by the Anglo-Normans in the tower. Reginald’s Tower was also where Strongbow, the leader of the Anglo-Norman invasion force, met Aoife, the daughter of Dermot McMurrough, King of Leinster. Their marriage was to change the course of Irish history forever. In later centuries the Tower took on the functions of a royal castle. King John visited the tower in 1210 and ordered new coins to be struck here. Richard II visited the tower in 1394 and again in 1399. On 27 July 1399 Richard left Reginald's Tower as King of England and Wales; on his arrival in England he was captured by the future Henry VI and forced to abdicate. In 1463 the Irish Parliament established a mint in the tower. In 1495, the tower’s cannons successfully deterred the forces of Perkin Warbeck, the pretender to the throne of Henry VII. This act of loyalty earned the city its motto "Urbs Intacta Manet" - "Waterford remains the unconquered city". In 1690 following his defeat at the Battle of the Boyne, King James II of England is alleged to have climbed to the top of the tower to take a last look at his lost kingdom before embarking for exile in France. During the 17th and 18th centuries the Tower was used as a store for munitions and in the early 19th century it functioned as a prison. In the late 19th and first half of the twentieth century it became the residence of the Chief Constable of Waterford. The Tower was opened to the public for the first time in the 1950s.

Contact

Telephone+353 (0)51 30 4220
Fax:+353 (0)51 30 4220
Email: reginaldstower@opw.ie
Website: www.heritageireland.ie
Address: The Quay, Waterford City, Co Waterford, Republic of Ireland


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