Articles
Portrait of Mourne
28/01/10
From the book cover:
"It is hard to surpass the elegance of the words of Percy French when he described how ‘the Mountains of Mourne sweep down to the sea’. Mourne is situated in the south of County Down and is dominated by the mountains that take their name from the area. The Mountains of Mourne are a relatively small range, both in terms of the area covered and the heights of the peaks, but this modesty is deceptive and belies their extraordinary importance for thousands of years in shaping the northeast corner of the island. The mountains were an important natural defence for the Kingdom of Mourne where the Mughdhorna settled in the twelfth century and they became of key importance in the development of Belfast as a population centre in the 1900s. Granted city status in 1888, the Water Commissioners of Belfast turned to the Mournes to provide the water needed for the rapidly growing city. The construction of the Silent Valley Dam and the 22-mile MourneWall changed not only the mountains but also the economic outlook for the whole of the country. This beautifully illustrated book with more than 140 colour photographs explores not only the mountains themselves, but also the area from which they take their name and the people who live and work there.