Font, Slievereagh, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Religious Objects
In a graveyard on a gently sloping hillside at Slievereagh in County Wicklow, a granite font sits quietly to the south of the burial ground's centre, unroofed and exposed to the elements.
What makes it quietly arresting is its specificity: subrectangular in shape, measuring 0.71 metres by 0.55 metres, with a carved basin inside measuring 0.53 metres by 0.38 metres and dropping to a depth of 0.27 metres. A small drain-hole is cut into one corner of the base, a practical detail that speaks to centuries of actual liturgical use rather than mere ornament. A baptismal font of this kind would once have held water for the rite of baptism, and to find one outdoors, unattached to any standing church structure, suggests the building it once served has long since disappeared.
The font's situation adds another layer of interest. The graveyard occupies a south-west-facing slope that looks down towards a stream roughly 80 metres away, beside which a holy well survives. Holy wells in Ireland were venerated long before Christianity and were frequently absorbed into early Christian practice, becoming sites of prayer, pilgrimage, and healing. The proximity here of a graveyard, a font, and a holy well along the same watercourse points to a cluster of sacred use that was probably ancient even when the font was new. The granite itself is local to the Wicklow landscape, a hard, durable stone that has kept the basin's proportions legible despite whatever weathering the centuries have brought.