Browse Items (581 total) Browse All Browse by Tag Search Items Browse Map Previous Page Page of 59 Next Page Sort by: Title Creator Date Added Tower House Bedroom Ceiling. View from below with floor removed. The rafters are modeled on those still extant in the tower house at Dunsoghly Castle, Co. Dublin, as well as the reconstructed roof at Barryscourt Castle, Co. Cork. Tower House Bedroom. View of fireplace, window and ceiling. Wood paneling added decoration and helped to keep rooms warm. Tower House Bedroom. View from north. Windows are more secure and hence larger on this floor than on lower levels of the tower house: the higher the floor, the more difficult they are to access. Larger windows also let in more light. The two doors on the left (east) wall lead to the stairs (up and down). Spenser's study can be seen through the door facing the viewer. Tower House Bedroom Tower House Bedroom. View from the south. In the foreground are Edmund and Elizabeth's curtained bed and wardrobe. Tower House Study. View from the east. Among the books and papers are a skull and a Spanish-style helmet. Tower House Study. View from above. The Faerie Queene by Spenser is open on his desk. Tower House Chapel. View from the east. A late-medieval mural fresco of St. Christopher, who holds the Christ child and is trampling a snake (representing the devil), are on the facing wall. Tower House Chapel. View from the east. The entrance to the staircase, to the north, is on the right out of sight. A window is on the south wall. The make-shift altar (a table and cloth) stands beneath the east window. A small recess in the wall, or aumbry, containing a leather vessel for wine, a pewter plate and chalice (for religious services) can be seen on the right. Tower House Chapel. View from above. Windows face south and east. Previous Page Page of 59 Next Page Output Formats atom, csv, dc-rdf, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2