R392 road (Ireland)

R392 road shield}}

R392 road
Route information
Length: 47 km (29 mi)
Location
Primary
destinations:
Road network
Hazardous Church ahead - on the R392 under the Hill of Forgney

The R392 road is a regional road in Ireland linking Lanesborough, County Longford on the N63 to Mullingar, County Westmeath.


Its route takes it in an arch (NW to SE) roughly west of the Royal Canal, which it crosses three times. The main town en route is Ballymahon, where it crosses the N55 and the River Inny.


The R392 closely follows the route of a portion of an ancient ceremonial route from Rathcroghan, in County Roscommon (the ancient capital of the kingdom of Connaught), to the Hill of Tara, in county Meath (the ancient residence of the High King of Ireland. This largely accounts for the remarkable straightness of the R392 compared to other Regional roads in the area. The route also closely passes the Hill of Uisneach, an even older royal and spiritual site than Tara located between the villages of Moyvore and Loughnavalley and place of origin of the festival of Bealtine. West of Ballymahon, before crossing the River Shannon, the R392 runs parallel to the Corlea Trackway, an ancient wooden trackway across a peat bog found by bog workers in the 1980s and excavated fully in 1991. This link with the Corlea trackway indicates the R392 route to be one of the oldest routes in Ireland, possibly even in Europe.


The road is 47 km (29 mi) long.

Long straight sections are a feature of the R392

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.