Architecture in Kildare
Kildare (cell dara, the church of the oak). The See of Kildare Accommodation, Kildare, Ireland) was for some time during the early period of its existence reckoned as an archbishopric. It was founded some time in the sixth century by St Brigid and originated in a. monastic institution. The early history of the See is obscure, and there is difficulty ill tracing its line of bishops. Harris, writing in the early part of the eighteenth century, described the church as being for the most part in ruins, but with the walls still standing, also the south side of the steeple and the walls
of the nave. Service was held in the choir. He mentions the round tower and also a pedestal of rough stones formed by the base of a cross, the top of which lay in the churchyard, while the shaft was converted into a step leading to the communion table. The cathedral remained in this state until the latter portion of the last century, when it was restored under the direction of the late G. E. Street. Before the restoration Mr Street reported on the state of the fabric and stated that the ancient cathedral appeared to have been a simple cruciform church with a tower, and a chapel of some kind opening from the eastern side of the south transept : tlie building appearing to have belonged to the thirteenth century. The church as at
present restored is a small and plain cruciform building, aisleless and with a central tower. The ancient round tower with its embattled top adds a picturesque effect to the cathedral.

Kildare (Bed and Breakfasts, Kildare, Ireland), a county of Ireland, province of Leinster, 37 m. long and 20 broad; bounded E by Dublin and Wicklow, W by King’s county and Queen’s county, N be E. Meath, and S by Catherlough, and containing 593 English acres, divided into 100 parishes. It sends 2 members to parliament. Its principal rivers are the Liffey, Barrow, and Boyne. A unique plain called the Curragh stretches across County Kildare (Self Catering, Kildare, Ireland), which is famous for horseracing, breeding and it has been the main training base for the Irish Army. Naas which comes from the Irish N� na Riogh, the assembly of Kings
was the seat of the Kings of Leinster. There is a butterfly farm in Straffan, County Kildare (Holiday Homes, Kildare, Ireland). Before the arrival of the Normans, the region was part of the territories of the O’Byrnes and O’Tooles. Following the granting of the county to the Norman Fitzgeralds, these were forced to migrate east, into the barren and impregnable Wicklow Mountains. The Fitzgeralds became earls of Kildare and, later, Dukes of Leinster, and were virtual rulers of Ireland up to the sixteenth century. The seat of the Irish Oireachtais (parliament), Leinster House in Kildare Street, Dublin is named for these Fitzgeralds. In recent years, the county has seen a large growth in its population, due almost entirely to the expansion of the suburbs of Dublin.