St. Patrick's Well, Clonmel

Coordinates: 52°21′27″N 7°45′08″W / 52.357606°N 7.752318°W / 52.357606; -7.752318
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St. Patrick's Well
Tobar Phádraig
Cross and church
St. Patrick's Well is located in Ireland
St. Patrick's Well
St. Patrick's Well
52°21′27″N 7°45′08″W / 52.357606°N 7.752318°W / 52.357606; -7.752318
CountryIreland
DenominationCatholic
TraditionRoman Rite

St. Patrick's Well is a medieval Christian site located in County Tipperary, Ireland, consisting of a holy well, 12th-century church and an ancient stone cross.[1]

Location[edit]

St. Patrick's Well is located in the Marlfield area, about 3.6 km (2.2 mi) west of Clonmel town centre.

History[edit]

Traditional history links the site with Saint Patrick, who proselytised Ireland in the 5th century.[2] It is mentioned in a 10th-century Life of Declan of Ardmore, so it was active at that time. From the 12th to 16th centuries, St. Patrick's Well belonged to nearby Inislounaght Abbey.[3] The crudeness of the stone cross has led to the belief that it is early.[4]

In 1617, Nicholas Fagan, Abbot of Inislounaght was buried at St. Patrick's. The earliest reference to pilgrimage at the site was as late as 1619, when Pope Paul V granted a plenary indulgence to all pilgrims visiting St Patrick's Church, provided they went to confession, took the Eucharist and visited the church on Pentecost or St. Patrick's Day, any time from Vespers to sunset.[3]

The Ordnance Survey letters, written by John Donovan who visited the site in the 1840s, say "it is still esteemed holy and visited by pilgrims far and near for the cure of disease especially headaches."[3]

In 1914 Power described the well as a "great basin filled to the brim with bubbling crystal water.., close by it in the march is a stunted, rude and early celtic cross which marks a penitential station." Early 20th century photographs of the well show it surrounded by a low circular enclosing wall with a large ash tree growing out of the side.[5] The remodelling of the site began in 1956 with the addition of the statue of St Patrick. In the late 1960s, the local St. Patrick's Day Society had the site remodelled; funding was provided by Sam Yorty, Mayor of Los Angeles, whose mother was from Clonmel. Additional funding came from Armand Hammer and the Irish-Israeli Society.[3]

Buildings and structures[edit]

Cross[edit]

At the centre of the lake is an undecorated early medieval stone cross.[6]

Well[edit]

The well emerges from an underground stream. It flows through two long hallowed-out granite spouts, similar to those at St. Brigid's Well, Kildare. The stones have been identified as flumes from an early medieval horizontal watermill.[3] Local tradition claimed that the water never froze over in winter.[7]

Church[edit]

A rectangular limestone church with a high gable, it may have been used as a medieval parish church and continued as a place of Church of Ireland worship until the 18th century. The exterior has been re-pointed and restored. Within the church is a late medieval altar tomb, which came from the White Mortuary Chapel in St Mary's Church, Clonmel; it was brought here after the chapel was demolished in 1805.[3]

A Romanesque fragment survives: a sandstone coign with chevron carvings, similar to that at Clonmacnoise.[8] Window heads and an armorial plaque from Inislounaght Abbey are incorporated into the east wall.[3]

Gallery[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Jackman, Neil (1 April 2016). Ireland's Ancient East. Gill & Macmillan Ltd. ISBN 9781848895614 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Broderick, Marian (11 March 2019). Saint Patrick: Life, Legend and Legacy. The O'Brien Press Ltd. ISBN 9781788491150 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "St Patrick's Holy Well at Marlfield Clonmel". 12 April 2014.
  4. ^ O'Riordan, Billy. "One of Ireland's largest holy wells - dedicated to St Patrick - is believed to have healing properties". The Irish Post.
  5. ^ Carroll, Michael P. (12 March 1999). Irish Pilgrimage: Holy Wells and Popular Catholic Devotion. JHU Press. ISBN 9780801861901 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ "Visit St. Patricks Well - Clonmel with Discover Ireland". Discover Ireland.
  7. ^ Creedon, John (30 October 2020). That Place We Call Home: A Journey Through the Place Names of Ireland. Gill & Macmillan Ltd. ISBN 9780717189861 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Burke, William P. (3 December 2014). History of Clonmel. Read Books Ltd. ISBN 9781447498025 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ Morrissey, James F. (1909). "Clonmel". The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 39 (3): 242–254. JSTOR 25514000.
  10. ^ Hogan, Edmund (1878). "The Description of Ireland: And the State Thereof as it is at this Present in Anno 1598".