On a stormy October night in 1588, a Spanish ship carrying over a thousand men struck rocks below one of Ireland’s most dramatic clifftop castles. Only nine men made it ashore. What happened next was a story Ireland kept quietly for nearly 400 years.

A Fleet in Ruins
The Spanish Armada had set out that summer with 130 ships and over 27,000 men. It was the largest naval fleet assembled up to that point in history. By October, it was in pieces.
Storms had scattered the fleet up around the coast of Scotland and down the western seaboard of Ireland. One by one, ships began to founder on unfamiliar coastlines. Survivors from each wreck clambered onto whatever vessel would take them, overcrowding ships already strained beyond their limits.
The Girona was a large galleasse — part galley, part sailing ship. She had taken on survivors from at least two other stricken Armada vessels. By the time she rounded the north Antrim coast, she was carrying more than 1,300 men. She was not built to hold that many.
The Night the Girona Went Down
On the 26th of October 1588, the Girona struck Lacada Point — a stretch of jagged basalt rocks near the Giant’s Causeway. She broke apart almost immediately.
Of more than 1,300 men on board, only nine survived.
The dead included many nobles of Spain and Portugal. Men who had survived earlier Armada wrecks only to drown here, within sight of the Irish shore. Historians believe the Girona was carrying an extraordinary weight of gold jewellery and coins — partly because the surviving nobles had consolidated their valuables onto the last seaworthy ship they could find.
The wreck lay untouched on the seabed for 379 years.
The Castle That Opened Its Gates
Perched on basalt cliffs just a short distance from Lacada Point stands Dunluce Castle — one of Ireland’s most recognisable fortresses. In 1588, its lord was Sorley Boy MacDonnell, chief of the MacDonnells of the Glens of Antrim.
Sorley Boy had watched Armada survivors washing up on his coastline for weeks. He sheltered them, fed them, and in some cases helped them reach Scotland. When the Girona went down, the few who made it past the rocks were brought to Dunluce.
The castle had been the MacDonnells’ stronghold for decades. Positioned on a sea stack separated from the mainland by a narrow chasm, it commanded views of both land and sea. Those same cliffs that made it so formidable also made it a witness to everything that happened below.
Sorley Boy could do nothing for the 1,300 men lost to the sea. But he could — and did — honour those who made it to shore.
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The Gold That Waited Four Centuries
In 1967, a Belgian diver named Robert Sténuit studied every record he could find about the Girona wreck. He cross-referenced Spanish Armada documents, nautical charts, and coastline surveys until he identified Lacada Point as the site.
When he dove, he found extraordinary things.
Gold rings. A spectacular pendant in the shape of a salamander, set with rubies. A gold cameo brooch. Fragments of silver tableware. Coins from across the Spanish Empire. Many items were engraved with the coats of arms of Spanish noble families — proof that these were not ordinary passengers.
The finds were handed to Northern Ireland’s museums and today form one of the finest Armada collections in the world.
Where to See the Girona Treasure Today
Ulster Museum, Belfast
The Girona collection is on permanent free display at the Ulster Museum. The gold salamander pendant alone — a breathtaking piece of Renaissance craftsmanship — is worth the visit on its own.
You can stand within a few feet of objects that were on a Spanish nobleman’s person when he drowned off this coast in 1588. Very few museums can place you that close to a specific human story.
Lacada Point
The wreck site can be reached on foot from the Giant’s Causeway — roughly 20 minutes along the cliff path. Millions visit the Causeway each year for its basalt columns. Very few walk the extra distance to the rocks where the Girona came to rest.
From Lacada Point, you can see the ruins of Dunluce Castle in the distance. On a clear day, the view is remarkable. On a stormy day, it tells you everything you need to know about October 1588.
If you’re planning a trip to Ireland, the Antrim coast holds layer upon layer of history like this — waiting quietly just beyond the famous photographs.
There is something strange about standing at Lacada Point today. The sea is often calm. Seabirds drift above the cliff tops. The ruins of Dunluce Castle are visible in the distance, grey and solid above the Atlantic.
In 1588, men from Seville and Lisbon looked at this same shoreline as their last sight on earth. A handful survived and were taken in by an Irish lord who had never met them. Ireland does not always shout about its generosity. But it rarely forgets it either.
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