Holy well, Kilpadder, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Holy Sites & Wells
Tucked into a wooded corner of Kilpadder in south-west Kerry, this holy well dedicated to St Paul sits just thirty metres east of a companion well dedicated to St Peter, the two forming a paired devotional landscape that still draws pilgrims each year on the feast of Saints Peter and Paul.
The pairing is quietly unusual; most holy wells in Ireland stand alone, gathering their own local legends and patron days. Here, the arrangement is deliberate and sequential, with St Peter's well serving as the first station and St Paul's as the second during the traditional 'rounds', a ritual circuit of prayer in which devotees walk a prescribed path while reciting prayers at set points.
The well itself is modest in scale, measuring roughly a metre from north to south and just fifteen centimetres deep, fed by water seeping from the base of a moss-covered stone wall that faces north and is flanked on either side by natural outcropping rock. The whole enclosure, roughly oval and about eighty metres across at its widest, is bounded by an earthen bank and entered through a gate on the western side. Inside, a worn path follows the perimeter, tracing the route pilgrims walk during the rounds. A statue stands on the rock beside the well, and nearby a cross and a second statue are sheltered within a purpose-built structure. According to Captain D. B. O'Connell, writing for the Kerry Archaeological Society, the dedication to St Paul appears to have been well established locally, though the precise history of the site is not fully documented.
The rounds at Kilpadder take place on the 28th and 29th of June, coinciding with the feast of Saints Peter and Paul. Those who visit on those dates will find a site that is genuinely still in devotional use rather than simply preserved for historical interest. The path around the enclosure, worn by long use, and the flow of water from the base of the old stone wall give the place a character that is less about architecture than about repeated, quiet attendance over a very long period.