Abbey Of The Iubhar Cinn Tragha . Newry County Down Ireland. |
A link above to one of the slaughters that took place at Newry, there were more of
these massive death tolls & when you get to this page above, patience when looking.Another below where you can read about Monroe |
WHEN YOU STUDY ABBEY RECORDS, YOUNG MONKS WERE REGULAR VICTIMS, but to ask us to believe that these people who were in the mass grave were supposed
to be the front line men of Bagenals army,is a bit far fetched, so please
get a grip Newry & tell the truth the way most of it is recorded please. The facts show that a mass burial took place here in Newry chapel,but who really carried it out. ? According to these Castle builders of today, it was the Irish them selves. Makes good sense. ? |

The cutting below tries to explain away the truth surounding the mass grave found
in a so called New Castle. What archaeologists found in this the oldest building
in Newry building in Castle Street Newry was infact a mass grave,and dont forget that this picture that you just looked at was taken by the people
that were present at this secret dig. The public were told that the bodies
were all found, laid out in christian fashion faceing the east. The picture
tells a different story, so why the lies. ? The words of these so
called experts would make you wonder do they know anything at all. They state that
the burials could have taken place between 1550 and or 1650, a full hundred years to speculate on.
By the way !! this hundred years is the same period they give us to guess when
this so called New Castle was built. Really what they say throughout is that they
dont know. They say that the bodies were dug through the foundations
of demolished monastery building, well now there a statment and a half ,
and there was me thinking that the undercrofts were still there at the bottom of
the Cistercian steps that they also found, these being the same steps that a
great sheet of thick glass now covers. They describe these 12th century steps as
a 19th cent stairway,which leads into an 19th cent English Cellar, amazingly
this cellar is also supposed to be below a 16th cent Castle. |
They try to make out that this burial ground is Bagenals personal grave yard. Yet
he was buried up at St Patricks on the hill half a mile away. |