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Charleville Castle and the Mystical Ley Lines and Haunting Ghosts

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Some castles have all of the classical signs for hauntings. This is the case with the gothic Charleville Castle built on Ley Lines from druid times. On the estate is a cursed tree and ghosts from those that lived and worked at Charleville Castle are still haunting grounds.

In the heart of County Offaly in Ireland, looming within the ancient embrace of a dense forest, is Charleville Castle. This gothic fortress was a place where Lord Byron was said to have hosted many parties as well as being the home for many ghosts. 

In the early 17th century, a mansion stood where the castle was built, originally belonging to Thomas Moore from 1641. The castle was completed in 1812 and said to be one of the best examples of gothic revival in Ireland by the Earl of Charlesville and his wife. The castle’s story took a sinister turn in 1912 when it was forsaken, left to the echoes of forgotten footsteps for more than half a century. 

Read More: Check out all of the ghost stories from Ireland

It wasn’t until 1973 that the first tentative steps toward its revival were taken by the steadfast hands of restoration of the then ruins of the once great castle. Today, The Charleville Castle Heritage Trust tends to its spectral halls and enigmatic chambers, for this castle is more than just stone and mortar—it’s a living, breathing enigma.

The Occult Earl of Charlesville

It is said that the Earl of Charlesville was dabbling in the occult, and if this is true, it might explain where he decided to build his holiday residence as the castle first was. 

Built upon the convergence of ley lines, enshrouded by forests where ancient druids of pagan times once conducted mysterious rites, it is no wonder that Charleville Castle has earned the reputation of being one of Ireland’s most paranormally active haunts.

The Mysterious Ley Lines

Ley lines are straight alignments connecting various historic structures, prehistoric sites, and landmarks. This concept emerged in early 20th-century Europe, suggesting that ancient societies intentionally erected structures along these lines. Some believers argue that ley lines mark “earth energies” and even guide alien spacecraft, but archaeologists and scientists consider ley lines as pseudoarchaeology and pseudoscience.

Ley hunters practiced dowsing, numerology, and believed in a forthcoming transformative Age of Aquarius. Despite their enthusiasm, they failed to provide scientific evidence for earth energies at prehistoric sites.

Amid sustained archaeological criticism, the ley hunter community declined in the 1990s, with some proponents shifting toward landscape archaeology and folkloristics. However, belief in ley lines persists in esoteric religious groups, including some forms of modern Paganism. Archaeologists emphasize that there is no evidence of ley lines being recognized by ancient European societies and that the connections often involve structures from different historical eras. Skeptics highlight that the concept of earth energies remains unverified by science, relying on faith for its adherents.

The Mysterious King Oak Tree

Although there is no proof that it is the Ley Lines that makes the place a mystical one that brings out the paranormal, there are many that claim this is one of the reasons for the haunted rumors, as well as some other legends found on the property.

Read More: Check out all of the Haunted Castle’s from around the world

There is also a mysterious Oak Tree outside in the woods at the old estate of Charleville Castle called The King Oak. It is said to be over 800 years old and is said to be connected to the Bury family that have a long connection to the castle as the Earls of Charleville.

According to the legends, just before a male member of the family is about to die, the tree will drop a branch or get struck by lightning. In 1963 the tree was struck by lightning, splitting the main trunk from top to bottom and causing the loss of at least one branch. The tree survived but Colonel Charles Howard-Bury, the explorer and last member of the Bury family line died a few weeks afterwards.

The King Oak: At the entrance of the castle grounds, the old Oak Tree is planted with a mysterious connection to the family. //Source: Michelle/Flickr

The Ghost of Harriet at Charleville Castle

Within these eerie confines, the ghost of an eight-year-old girl named Harriet resides. In 1861, Lady Harriet Bury embarked on a fateful descent down the castle’s grand staircase, by sliding down the banister. She lost her grip and met her tragic end on the stone floor below, breaking her neck and died. 

More than a century later, in the dead of night, two trustees working at Charleville Castle woke at the ghostly hour of 3 am. A spectral voice, haunting yet sweet, pierced the silence, followed by a blood-curdling scream. Fearful that an intruder had breached their sanctuary, one went to investigate. No living soul had entered the castle. 

The Ghost: There are many ghosts residing in the castle if we are to take the rumours at face value. One of them is supposedly a little girl that died after falling from the stairs. //Source: Matt McKnight/Flickr

Despite the grisly nature of her passing, Harriet’s spirit seems to harbor no malice. She manifests herself from time to time, a vision in blue and white, playing on the very stairs that stole her life away. Eerie echoes of her laughter and the melodious notes of her songs have graced the ears of visitors. 

It is said she is not alone though, as the spirit of her uncle, Henry Walter is also said to haunt the place. He died of influenza when he was only 7 in London. He was brought back to Ireland and buried in the family vault. 

The Green Mist

For those spending the nights at Charleville Castle, reports of a sinister green mist materializing from the very fabric of a bedroom wall have left guests trembling and in the same room, one unfortunate person was mysteriously locked out, then inexplicably trapped inside, with neither key nor a person to blame.

There was also one time a man stayed in the room with his girlfriend after a party. When he turned to her, he didn’t see his tall dark haired girlfriend, but an older blonde woman. 

The Octagon Room

There are tales of mysterious monks walking the house and other dark shadows lurking in the corners and in the forsaken dungeons, where tortured souls suffered in the early 19th century, manic laughter and disembodied voices continue to reverberate through the stillness.

One that stayed in the castle recalls eerie noises and an ethereal light dancing on the floor above while they stayed in the Octagon Room—yet there was no one to cast such a glow, and the area lacked electricity. Another volunteer speaks of a distinct knock upon their door at the unholy hour of 1:30 am, with the rest of the castle asleep soundly. 

A Stay at the Haunted Charleville Castle

Charleville Castle remains a magnet for seekers of the supernatural, a place where psychics and paranormal enthusiasts converge, eager to unlock the castle’s darkest mysteries. Within its formidable stone walls, the past and present entwine, and the echoes of history speak of restless spirits who refuse to fade into the shadows.

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References:

Featured Image: IrishFireside/Flickr

Charleville Castle | Haunted Offaly, Ireland | Spirited Isle 

‘She broke her neck, it’s very tragic’ – The haunting of Charleville Castle 

Charleville Castle Ghosts, Ireland – Folklore, Deaths and the Paranormal 

Charleville Castle – Wikipedia Haunted Offaly

The Lost City of Dode

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In the heart of the British countryside, the past of the plague, death and history haunts the desecrated church. But amid the mystery of the paranormal and pagan ley lines, the once cursed site has found back to being sacred. 

There are a lot of magical and mysterious things surrounding the church that stands in solitude in the countryside in Kent. The original building on top of the hill was built around 1100 during William the second rule. But the man made ground it was built on has perhaps been used as a holy place to gather long before Christianity reached the British shores. 

Around this church there also used to be a village, alive and thriving. But together with the black death the villagers were swept away, and with them, the village of Dode died as well. 

Ley Lines and Ghosts

Haunted church: Dode church was left abandoned for centuries with rumours of being haunted and used for black magic rituals.
Source: Chris Whippet

All left from the lost village of Dode is the old Norman church that is said to be haunted by a little girl. This is not the only paranormal and mystical rumours surrounding this place, this particular church. The old ruins are built on not only one, but eight ley lines, mystical lines that allegedly connect several holy buildings, monuments and places around the world according to modern paganism.

The place is filled with history as archeologists have found evidence of it being inhabited since the roman empire, perhaps even much further back in time. 

The church was eventually not used as a place of worship and they changed the name of the land it was built on. Because of the rumours about it being cursed, the name Holy Hill was changed to Holly Hill as no one felt the presence of anything holy there anymore, as rumours and legends of it being cursed grew.

The Dodechild

But who was this ghost said to haunt the abandoned church? Legend has it it was the last survivor of Dode village. After the Black Death in the 14th century, the village of Dode was abandoned. Nature claimed back the signs of living, leaving only the church as proof humans once lived there.

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However, there was still one of the villagers left. A seven year old girl was one of the last survivors in the village, seeing how everyone was being taken by the plague. She took refuge inside the church, eventually dying herself, but never really leaving. And according to local legends, she would appear on the first Sunday morning of every month, haunting the grounds of were her and her entire village perished in the plague that killed millions of people across Europe. 

Since the time of the plague, the village was abandoned, the church forgotten and time, weather tore down the roof, the stones taken to build a medieval church nearby. It was only known as the haunted and lost place to the locals. It was believed the place was a cursed one, and that it was used for black magic rituals. Thus the Holy Hill was renamed Holly Hill and the church boarded up, taken apart and left for centuries until someone would find the place sacred once more. 

A Sacred Place for All

Wedding: The church is now used as a wedding venue for all types of ceremonies.

The church was rebuilt in the 90s after being abandoned for centuries, with the vision of bringing the holiness back to it and the work to get it back to how it would have looked originally began. With the restoration, life also came back into the hidden valley. Although this time, not a strictly catholic religious house as it used to be, but more of a sacred place for all, both for Catholics, members of the Church of England and pagans alike. 

Since then it has been a venue for weddings, making it a place for eternal love declarations, bringing the serenity back over the once holy hills. Other events such as baby namings, memorials and other cultural events also takes place in it, as long it is more of a spiritual than religous event.

And with the new life that has been breathed into the valley and nearby woodland, the ghost of the little girl also has been seen less and less.

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References

One man’s revival of ancient English rites

‘Ghost village’ 72 mins from London that was destroyed by the Black Death 

Ley line