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Trim| Market town in County Meath, Republic of Ireland, on the River Boyne; population (2002) 1,450. Trim has agricultural and light industries. It is one of the oldest ecclesiastical centres in Ireland, and Trim Castle is the largest Anglo-Norman fortress in the country. |
| St Loman was the first bishop here, in a see said to have been established by St Patrick in the 5th century. It was amalgamated in 1152 to form the diocese of Meath. |
| A number of parliaments were held in Trim in the 15th century. |
| The ruins of Trim Castle are well preserved, and it has a square keep 22 m/75 ft high. It was originally constructed by Hugh I de Lacey, who was granted the lands of Trim during the Anglo-Norman occupation, but it was rebuilt around 1200. There are two other castles in Trim, Nangle's Castle and Talbot's Castle, built in 1415. The Yellow Steeple is a 14th-century bell tower 38 m/125 ft high, and the ruins of St Mary's abbey also remain in the town. |
| At Newtown Trim 2 km/1 mi away are the ruins of the abbey of the Canons Regular of St Victor, founded by Bishop Simon de Rochfort in 1206. |
| The satirist Jonathan Swift was rector of Laracor (3 km/2 mi to the south) 1700–13, and the friend he called Stella (Esther Johnson) lived nearby. |
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