Holy well, Kilmogue, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Holy Sites & Wells
In the townland of Kilmogue in County Kilkenny, there is a holy well that has been formally recorded as an archaeological monument, yet remains largely undocumented in the public record.
Holy wells are among the most numerous and quietly persistent sacred sites in Ireland, typically associated with a patron saint, a pattern day of annual gathering and prayer, and a tradition of votive offerings left by visitors seeking healing or intercession. Thousands exist across the country, many still visited, many forgotten, and a significant number known only by name on a map.
Kilmogue itself carries a name with ecclesiastical weight. The element "kill" or "cill" in Irish place names generally points to an early church or monastic enclosure, suggesting that this corner of Kilkenny has been a place of some religious significance since at least the early medieval period. Holy wells in such townlands were rarely incidental; they often formed part of a broader sacred landscape, associated with a local saint whose name and story have in many cases dissolved into the landscape itself over the intervening centuries. The well at Kilmogue fits into that long, quiet tradition, a site whose formal recognition as a monument acknowledges its place in that history even where the particular details remain unrecorded.