Headstone, Blessington Demesne, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Religious Objects
Along the northern wall of a graveyard in the Blessington Demesne in County Wicklow, eight seventeenth-century headstones have been gathered and re-erected in a row, separated from whatever original positions they once occupied.
The arrangement has a quietly deliberate quality, as though someone recognised that these stones were too old and too fragile to be left scattered, and so drew them together into a kind of informal assembly.
One of the eight bears the name Richard Provei, who died sometime in the 1680s, the final digit of his death year now lost to weathering or damage. The abbreviated Latin notation "ob." stands for obiit, meaning "he died", a conventional formula on memorial stonework of the period. Beyond the name and the partial date, little else survives on the inscription. Seventeenth-century headstones in Ireland are comparatively rare; vernacular grave markers of that era were often made from locally sourced stone of variable quality, and many did not endure. That eight should survive together in a single graveyard, and have been carefully repositioned for preservation, makes this a genuinely unusual concentration.