Clondulane
| Clondulane Cluain Dalláin | |
|---|---|
| Village | |
| Clondulane village green | |
| Coordinates: 52°08′33″N 08°13′24″W / 52.14250°N 8.22333°W | |
| Country | Ireland | 
| Province | Munster | 
| County | County Cork | 
| Population  (2022) | 470 | 
| Time zone | UTC+0 (WET) | 
| • Summer (DST) | UTC-1 (IST (WEST)) | 
Clondulane (Irish: Cluain Dalláin) is a village and civil parish in north County Cork, Ireland. The village is about 4 mi (6 km) east of Fermoy, just off the main Fermoy-Dungarvan road. Originally built as a camp for the workers of a Cork Milling Company grain mill, it now has a population of over 400. Clondulane is part of the Cork East Dáil constituency.
There are three large houses of note in the village: Clondulane, Glandulane, and Careysville Houses, the latter being owned by the Duke of Devonshire (England) and used as a lodging house during the salmon season. Along with several housing estates and many stand alone dwellings, there is a school, community centre, public house, playing fields, park, disused railway station, factory, a Protestant school, Protestant church and graveyard.