Carrickfergus, town and former district (1973–2015) within the former County Antrim, now in Mid and East Antrim district, Northern Ireland, on the northern shore of Belfast Lough (inlet of the sea). The name, meaning “rock of Fergus,” commemorates King Fergus, who was shipwrecked off the coast about 320 ce. Because of its strategic position on a rocky spur above the harbour, Carrickfergus Castle, a perfectly preserved relic of the Norman period, has played a large part in Irish history. It was besieged and taken by the Scot Edward Bruce, brother of Robert the Bruce, in 1316 but reverted to English rule in 1318 and remained an isolated stronghold of the English crown. In the English Civil Wars (1642–51) the castle was one of the chief places of refuge for the Protestants of Antrim; in 1642 the first presbytery held in Ireland met there. It was later held by partisans of the English king James II but surrendered in 1689 to the duke of Schomberg, and in 1690 William III landed there on his expedition to Ireland.
Although chartered since the reign of Elizabeth I, the corporation of Carrickfergus town was superseded in 1840 by a board of municipal commissioners. Carrickfergus was the county town (seat) of Antrim until 1850. The parish church of St. Nicholas, begun by John de Courci at the end of the 12th century, is renowned for its monument (1625) to Lord Chichester, lord deputy of Ireland (1604–14). The former Carrickfergus district was bordered by the former districts of Newtownabbey to the west and Larne to the north. Its northwestern section is hilly terrain, sloping southward to the flat shores of Belfast Lough. Salt is mined at the village of Eden, northeast of Carrickfergus town, and a sizable wooded area in the western portion of the former district of Carrickfergus affords scenic camping and hiking. Carrickfergus town is a pleasure-boat centre and is connected by road to Belfast. Area former district, 30 square miles (77 square km). Pop. (2001) town, 27,192; (2011) town, 27,903.