River Greese

River Greese (Griese)

The Greese in County Kildare
Native name An Ghrís
Country Ireland
Basin
Main source Dunlavin, County Wicklow
~146 m (479 ft)
River mouth Celtic Sea at Waterford Harbour via River Barrow
Basin size 72 km2 (28 sq mi)
Physical characteristics
Length ~35 km (22 mi)
Discharge
  • Average rate:
    0.22 m3/s (7.8 cu ft/s)

The River Greese (also spelled Griese; Irish: An Ghrís) is a small, fast-flowing river in south-east, Ireland, and a tributary of the River Barrow.[1]

Coordinates: 53°01′33″N 6°45′47″W / 53.025833°N 6.763113°W / 53.025833; -6.763113

Name

The river takes its name from Killeen Cormac, which bears the name capella de Gris ("Gris Chapel") in Crede Mihi, a c. 1280 ancient register of the Archbishops of Dublin, with the name also spelled Grys/Gryse in later accounts, and the rivulus de Grys appearing in John Alen's 1533 Reportorium Viride. Jacob Nevill's 1760 map shows the River Greeces, while Greese /ˈɡrs/ is the spelling generally used in the modern day, although Griese is also used.[2]

Course

The river rises near Dunlavin, County Wicklow. It then runs south-west and forms part of the County Wicklow/Kildare border. The Greese continues west past Killeen Cormac (formerly capella de Gris, from which the river takes its name). It is bridged by the R448 road at Moyleabbey, County Kildare. It meets a tributary in Crookstown and passes under the R415, then flows southward through Ballitore. The Greese flows southsouthwest, crossing under the M9, through Kilkea Golf Club and past Kilkea Castle, passing under the Dublin–Waterford railway line at Newtownpilsworth/Dunmanoge and draining into the River Barrow in the Jerusalem townland, Painestown downstream of Maganey Lock (this last stretch forms part of the County Carlow/Kildare border).

Wildlife

Fish include brown trout (up to 3 kg), stone loach, Atlantic salmon, European eel, three-spined stickleback and European river lamprey.[3]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.