The town's population was 14,412 as of the2022 census, making it the second largest in the county.[1] Killarney won the Best Kept Town award in 2007, in a cross-border competition jointly organised by theDepartment of the Environment and the Northern Ireland Amenity Council. In 2011, it was named Ireland's tidiest town and the cleanest town in the country by Irish Business Against Litter.[3]
Killarney featured prominently in early Irish history, with religious settlements playing an important part of its recorded history. Its first significantly historical settlement was the monastery on nearbyInnisfallen Island founded in 640 bySt. Finian the Leper,[4] which was occupied for approximately 850 years.
Innisfallen (from Irish:Inis Faithlinn, meaning "Faithlinn's island") is an island in Lough Leane, one of the three Lakes of Killarney. It is home to the ruins of Innisfallen Abbey which was founded in 640 by St. Finian, and was occupied until the monks were dispossessed in 1594, byElizabeth I, Queen of England. According to tradition, theIrish High KingBrian Boru received his education at Innisfallen.
Aghadoe, the local townland which overlooks present day Killarney, may have begun as a pagan religious site.[5] The site has also been associated with the 5th century missionarySt. Abban, but 7th centuryogham stones mark the first clear evidence of Aghadoe being used as an important site.[6] According to legend, St. Finian founded a monastery at Aghadoe in the 6th or 7th century. The first written record of amonastery dates from 939 AD in theAnnals of Innisfallen where the Aghadoe monastery is referred to as the "Old Abbey."[6]
Following the Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169, the Normans builtParkavonear Castle, also at Aghadoe. The castle was perhaps intended as an early warning outpost due to its views of the entire Killarney valley and lakes region.
Ross Castle was built on the lake shore in the late 15th century by local ruling clan the O'Donoghues Mor (Ross). Ownership of the castle changed hands during theDesmond Rebellions of the 1580s to the Mac Carty Mor.
Killarney was heavily involved in theIrish War of Independence. The town, and indeed the entire county, had strong republican ties, and skirmishes with the British forces happened on a regular basis.The Great Southern Hotel was for a while taken over by the British,[7] both as an office and barracks, and to protect the neighbouring railway station. One notable event during the war was theHeadford Ambush when theIRA attacked a railway train a few kilometres from town.
However, divisions among former colleagues were quick to develop following the truce and treaty, and Killarney, like many other areas, suffered in the rash of increasingatrocities during theCivil War. A day after theBallyseedy massacre, fiveRepublican prisoners were killed in Killarney byFree State forces.
Two views of Killarney painted by a visiting artist in 1830
Killarney's tourism history goes back at least to the mid 18th century, whenThomas, fourth Viscount Kenmare (Lord Kenmare), began to attract visitors and new residents to the town. The date of 1747 was used in recent 250-year celebrations to honour the history of Killarney tourism. A visit byQueen Victoria in 1861 gave the town some international exposure.
Killarney benefited greatly from the coming of the railway in July 1853. British trade directory publisherIsaac Slater noted that there were three hotels in the town in 1846[16] but by 1854, one year after the coming of the railway, James Fraser named seven hotels and described their locations:
the Railway Hotel opposite the Railway Station; the Kenmare Arms and Hibernia which are on the main street and immediately opposite the church... the Victoria which is about a mile [1.5 km] to the west of the town on the shores of the Lower Lake; the Lake View which is about the same distance to the east of the town and also on the shore of the Lower Lake; the Muckross about two and a half miles [4 km] away and near theMuckross Lake and the Torc which occupies an elevated site about a mile and a half [2.5 km] from the town on the hill which rises immediately over the Lake Hotel.[17]
Peasant home, Killarney, early 1910s
In 1858, Irish born Victorian journalist,Samuel Carter Hall named O'Sullivan's Hotel and the Innisfallen rather than the Hibernia and Torc, but Isaac Slater also named the Hibernia in 1846. At the time he was writing, tours of theRing of Kerry were already an industry and Killarney was considered the starting point of the 175-kilometre (110 mi) circuitous route. He was fascinated by the horses' endurance on the two-day trip, and leaves clear advice for other travellers;
It is a common and wise custom of those who make this tour, and are not pressed for time, to hire the carriage at the hotel in Killarney and continue with it 'all the way round.' It is absolutely marvellous what these mountain bred horses can get through "thinking nothing" of thirty miles [50 km] for days together or even fifty miles [80 km] in a single day.[18]
As part of the trip, he noted that there were hotels inGlenbeigh andWaterville along with a "comfortable inn", which is now theButler Arms Hotel.
Thomas Browne, 4th Viscount Kenmare founded linen mills in the 1740s as part of his efforts to increase the population and economy of Killarney. In later years,hosiery and shoe making were major industries in the town. One such shoe factory was Hillards, which employed 250 people at its peak.[19]
Modern employers includeLiebherr Cranes, which has had a presence in Killarney since 1958, with a combined manufacturing/research and development facility in the town manufacturing container cranes. In honour of its founder, a street in Killarney was named Hans Liebherr Road.[20] Other businesses includeTricel (also known as Killarney Plastics) which was founded in 1973.[21]
Tourism is the largest industry in Killarney, generating around €410 million every year.[23] Roughly 1.1 million tourists visit the town every year, with foreign tourists making up over 60% of all visitors.[24][25]
In 2023, in a scheme intended to reducelitter volumes during the tourist season, Killarney became the first town in Ireland to ban single-use coffee cups.[26]
Killarney Athletic A.F.C. was founded in 1965, and played its first competitive game in the Desmond League as a youth team. It entered a junior team at the start of 1966.[citation needed] In the early 1970s, the club became a founding club of the Kerry District League (KDL). Originally the club played in the centre of Killarney, but have since moved to a modern facility (with two pitches) in the Woodlawn area of the town.[citation needed]
Killarney Celtic was founded in 1976. The club purchased their own ground in 1993 and have invested in their facilities since then.[28] There is a grass pitch and a FIFA 1-star full-size synthetic all-weather pitch (both floodlit to match standard), a 50 x 80 meter grass training pitch and a 70 x 35 metre synthetic training pitch which is also fully floodlit.[citation needed]
Cedar Galaxy was formed in 2011 and play in theKerry District League Division 2B. The team were promoted to Division 2A for the 2013/2014 campaign.[citation needed]
There are sixrowing clubs in the town, who share a common history in Ireland's oldest surviving regatta, the Killarney Regatta, which is held annually on the first or second Sunday in July. The six clubs are Commercial RC (Killarney), Flesk Valley RC, Fossa RC, Muckross RC, St. Brendan's RC and Workmen RC. The style of rowing seen at the regatta is traditional, fixed seat rowing in wide, wooden six-person boats. Since the 1980s, a number of the clubs have moved toward coastal type rowing and modern 'slide' or Olympic style rowing.[citation needed]
Killarney RFC play in the Munster Junior League. The club's 1st XV won promotion to Division 2 in 2009–10.[29] while the same season the club fielded a 2nd XV for the first time. The club has also a large youth and underage set-up catering for all young enthuasists from the town and surrounding areas.
Killarney Golf & Fishing Club attracts various national competitions such as theIrish Open.The Ross Golf Course is a 9-hole golf course less than one mile from the centre of the town.
Killarney Racecourse is located just outside the town and holds flat and national hunt meetings.
The Ring of Kerry Cycle, a charity cycle around the Ring (175 km) takes place every first Saturday in July.[30] There is also a club in Killarney called Killarney Cycling Club.[31]
St. Paul's Killarney Basketball Club, founded in 1985, has entered both youth and senior teams in tournaments organised byBasketball Ireland.[32] Killarney is also the home of Irishfloorball.[33]
In 1900 the composerCyril Rootham wrote his Op.8 "Four Impressions (Killarney)" for solo violin and small orchestra.[34] The work was never published, but Rootham later arranged the work for pianoforte duet (Op.8 No.2, unpublished) and for violin and piano (Op.8.No.3, published in 1902 as "Impressions pour Violon et Piano").[35]
At the beginning of the 20th century, many songs which romanticized Ireland made direct mention of Killarney. Examples included "My Father Was Born In Killarney - Don’t Run Down The Irish" (1910), "Too Ra Loo Ra Loo Ral" (1914) and "For Killarney and you" (1910).[36][37][38]
"There's Only the One Killarney" is a song that was written by Irish songwriterDick Farrelly and recorded by Irish tenor Patrich O'Hagan. Killarney also appears in "How Can You Buy Killarney," written by Kennedy, Steels, Grant and Morrison, and recorded by Joseph Locke, among others. Killarney is also mentioned in "Christmas in Killarney" (written by Redmond, Cavanaugh and Weldon) and "Did Your Mother Come From Ireland?" (written by Kennedy and Carr), both most notably recorded byBing Crosby. "Some Say the Devil Is Dead" byDerek Warfield contains the line "Some say the devil is dead and buried in Killarney/ More say he rose again and joined the British Army."[39]
Van Morrison references the town in the opening lines of his 1974 song "Fair Play" off of his albumVeedon Fleece: "Fair play to you / Killarney's lakes are so blue / And the architecture I'm taking in with my mind / So fine."
^Lee, JJ (1981). "On the accuracy of thePre-famine Irish censuses". In Goldstrom, J. M.; Clarkson, L. A. (eds.).Irish Population, Economy, and Society: Essays in Honour of the Late K. H. Connell. Oxford, England: Clarendon Press.