River Bride

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River Bride
File:River Bride at Conna, Co. Cork - geograph.org.uk - 574660.jpg
River Bride at Conna, Co. Cork
Native name An Bhríd
Origin Commons, County Cork
Mouth Celtic Sea via Munster Blackwater
Basin countries Ireland
Length 64 kilometres (40 mi)
Avg. discharge ? m3/s
Basin area 419 square kilometres (162 sq mi)

The River Bride (Irish: An Bhríd) is a tributary of the Munster Blackwater in Ireland. Rising in the Nagle Mountains, it flows eastward, passing through counties of Cork and Waterford before joining the Munster Blackwater, approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) inland from Youghal Bay. The English poet Edmund Spenser is reputed to have written part of his poem "The Faerie Queene" on the banks of the Bride in the Conna area. [1] The villages of Rathcormac, Castlelyons, Conna and Tallow are situated on or near the river. The river runs through the baronies of Barrymore and Imokilly. The N72 road crosses the river at Tallowbridge, County Waterford.

References

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