. . . . . . . . "Hell Fire Club Dublin at Dawn.jpg"@en . . . . . . "Montpelier Hill (Irish: Cnoc Mount Pelier) is a 383 metres (1,257 foot) hill in County Dublin, Ireland. It is commonly referred to as the Hell Fire Club (Irish: Club Thine Ifreann), the popular name given to the ruined building at the summit believed to be one of the first Freemason lodges in Ireland. This building \u2013 a hunting lodge built in around 1725 by William Conolly \u2013 was originally called Mount Pelier and since its construction the hill has also gone by the same name. The building and hill were respectively known locally as 'The Brass Castle' and 'Bevan's Hill', but the original Irish name of the hill is no longer known although the historian and archaeologist Patrick Healy has suggested that the hill is the place known as Suide U\u00ED Ceallaig or Suidi Celi in the Crede Mihi, the twelf"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Montpelier Hill"@fr . . . . "Mount Pelier Hill"@en . . "County Dublin, Ireland"@en . "-6.330344676971436"^^ . "Montpelier Hill (en irlandais : Cnoc Montpelier) est une colline de 383 m\u00E8tres d'altitude situ\u00E9e dans le comt\u00E9 de Dublin en Irlande. Elle est surnomm\u00E9e Hell Fire Club (en irlandais : Club Thine Ifrinn, \u00AB le club du feu de l'enfer \u00BB), du nom du b\u00E2timent situ\u00E9 \u00E0 son sommet. Cet ancien pavillon de chasse, d\u00E9sormais en ruine, a \u00E9t\u00E9 construit vers 1725 par William Conolly. Au XXIe si\u00E8cle, Montpelier Hill et la plupart du terrain environnant, y compris le domaine Killakee, sont ouverts au public et appartiennent \u00E0 la compagnie foresti\u00E8re Coillte, propri\u00E9t\u00E9 de l'\u00C9tat irlandais."@fr . . . . . . . "1120985153"^^ . . "Is cnoc \u00E9 Cnoc Montpelier, 383 m\u00E9adar (1,257 dtroigh) ar airde i gContae Bhaile \u00C1tha Cliath, \u00C9ire. Club Thine Ifrinn a thugtar air go hiond\u00FAil (as B\u00E9arla: Hell Fire Club), an t-ainm coitianta a thugtar ar an bhfothrach de fhoirgneamh at\u00E1 suite ag mullach an chnoic. Th\u00F3g an foirgneamh mar timpeall na bliana 1725. Tugadh Cnoc Pelier n\u00F3 Mount Pelier as B\u00E9arla air agus tugadh seo ar an gnoc f\u00E9in leis \u00F3 t\u00F3gadh an l\u00F3iste. N\u00ED fios a thuilleadh c\u00E9ard \u00E9 bun-ainm an chnoic ach t\u00E1 , stara\u00ED agus seand\u00E1la\u00ED, den tuairim go m'fh\u00E9idir gur Suide U\u00ED Ceallaig n\u00F3 Suidi Celi mar a luaitear sa (leabhar chl\u00E1r\u00FAch\u00E1n na ndeois\u00ED de chuid Ardeaspaig Bhaile \u00C1tha Cliath) \u00E9, at\u00E1 i gceist."@ga . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Montpelier Hill (en irlandais : Cnoc Montpelier) est une colline de 383 m\u00E8tres d'altitude situ\u00E9e dans le comt\u00E9 de Dublin en Irlande. Elle est surnomm\u00E9e Hell Fire Club (en irlandais : Club Thine Ifrinn, \u00AB le club du feu de l'enfer \u00BB), du nom du b\u00E2timent situ\u00E9 \u00E0 son sommet. Cet ancien pavillon de chasse, d\u00E9sormais en ruine, a \u00E9t\u00E9 construit vers 1725 par William Conolly. La colline est associ\u00E9e \u00E0 de nombreux \u00E9v\u00E9nements paranormaux depuis que des membres d'un club secret, actif entre 1735 et 1741, ont commenc\u00E9 \u00E0 utiliser le lieu pour se r\u00E9unir. Le folklore local comporte plusieurs histoires lugubres concernant des agissements \u00E9tranges, de la d\u00E9bauche ainsi que des pratiques occultes et des manifestations d\u00E9moniaques autour de ce club, si bien que le b\u00E2timent a pris le nom de \u00AB Hell Fire Club \u00BB. Autour de la colline se trouvent diff\u00E9rents lieux et r\u00E9sidences, dont les restes du domaine Killakee, une grande demeure de style victorien avec un grand jardin \u00E0 la fran\u00E7aise, la maison des Stewards, ou encore le ch\u00E2teau de Carthy. Au XXIe si\u00E8cle, Montpelier Hill et la plupart du terrain environnant, y compris le domaine Killakee, sont ouverts au public et appartiennent \u00E0 la compagnie foresti\u00E8re Coillte, propri\u00E9t\u00E9 de l'\u00C9tat irlandais."@fr . "Location in Ireland"@en . . . . . "53.25186157226562"^^ . . . . . . "Cnoc Montpelier"@ga . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "12511562"^^ . . . . "OSI Discovery No. 50" . . . . . . . . . . "Is cnoc \u00E9 Cnoc Montpelier, 383 m\u00E9adar (1,257 dtroigh) ar airde i gContae Bhaile \u00C1tha Cliath, \u00C9ire. Club Thine Ifrinn a thugtar air go hiond\u00FAil (as B\u00E9arla: Hell Fire Club), an t-ainm coitianta a thugtar ar an bhfothrach de fhoirgneamh at\u00E1 suite ag mullach an chnoic. Th\u00F3g an foirgneamh mar timpeall na bliana 1725. Tugadh Cnoc Pelier n\u00F3 Mount Pelier as B\u00E9arla air agus tugadh seo ar an gnoc f\u00E9in leis \u00F3 t\u00F3gadh an l\u00F3iste. N\u00ED fios a thuilleadh c\u00E9ard \u00E9 bun-ainm an chnoic ach t\u00E1 , stara\u00ED agus seand\u00E1la\u00ED, den tuairim go m'fh\u00E9idir gur Suide U\u00ED Ceallaig n\u00F3 Suidi Celi mar a luaitear sa (leabhar chl\u00E1r\u00FAch\u00E1n na ndeois\u00ED de chuid Ardeaspaig Bhaile \u00C1tha Cliath) \u00E9, at\u00E1 i gceist."@ga . . . . . . . . . "right"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "yes"@en . . . . . "Montpelier Hill"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Mount Pelier Hill"@en . "POINT(-6.3303446769714 53.251861572266)"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Hell Fire Club"@en . . . "O120238"@en . . . . . . . . . "Mount Pelier Hill"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "383.0"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . "OSI Discovery No. 50"@en . . . . . "383"^^ . . . "53.25186111111111 -6.330344444444444" . . . . . . . . . . . . . "40303"^^ . . . . . "Montpelier Hill (Irish: Cnoc Mount Pelier) is a 383 metres (1,257 foot) hill in County Dublin, Ireland. It is commonly referred to as the Hell Fire Club (Irish: Club Thine Ifreann), the popular name given to the ruined building at the summit believed to be one of the first Freemason lodges in Ireland. This building \u2013 a hunting lodge built in around 1725 by William Conolly \u2013 was originally called Mount Pelier and since its construction the hill has also gone by the same name. The building and hill were respectively known locally as 'The Brass Castle' and 'Bevan's Hill', but the original Irish name of the hill is no longer known although the historian and archaeologist Patrick Healy has suggested that the hill is the place known as Suide U\u00ED Ceallaig or Suidi Celi in the Crede Mihi, the twelfth-century diocesan register book of the Archbishops of Dublin. Mount Pelier is the closest to Dublin city of the group of mountains \u2013 along with Killakee, Featherbed Bog, Kippure, Seefingan, Corrig, Seahan, Ballymorefinn, Carrigeenoura, and Slievenabawnogue \u2013 that form the ridge that bounds the Glenasmole valley. On the slopes is a forestry plantation, known as Hell Fire Wood, which consists of Sitka spruce, larch and beech. Originally there was a cairn with a prehistoric passage grave on the summit. Stones from the cairn were taken and used in the construction of Mount Pelier lodge. Shortly after completion, a storm blew the roof off. Local superstition attributed this incident to the work of the Devil, a punishment for interfering with the cairn. Mount Pelier Hill has since become associated with numerous paranormal events. Members of the Irish Hell Fire Club, which was active in the years 1735 to 1741, used Mount Pelier lodge as a meeting place. Stories of wild behaviour and debauchery and occult practices and demonic manifestations have become part of the local lore over the years. The original name of the lodge has been displaced and the building is generally known as the Hell Fire Club. When the lodge was damaged by fire, the members of the Hell Fire Club relocated down the hill to the nearby Stewards House for a brief period. This building also has a reputation for being haunted, most notably by a massive black cat. Adjacent to the Stewards House are the remains of Killakee Estate. A large Victorian house was built here in the early nineteenth century by Luke White. White's son, Samuel, oversaw the development of extensive formal gardens on the estate, including the construction of several glasshouses by Richard Turner. The estate passed to the Massy family through inheritance in 1880 and John Thomas Massy, the 6th Baron made extensive use of the house and ground to host shooting parties and society gatherings. The fortunes of the Massy family declined in the early twentieth century and Hamon Massy, the 8th Baron, was evicted from Killakee House in 1924. He became known as the \"Penniless Peer\". Following the eviction, Killakee House was demolished and the gardens fell into ruin. Today Mount Pelier Hill and much of the surrounding lands, including Killakee Estate (now called Lord Massy's Estate) are owned by the State forestry company Coillte and are open to the public."@en . . . "Hell Fire Club"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Dawn at the Hell Fire Club on Mount Pelier Hill, Dublin"@en .