Cross-inscribed stone, Dromavrauka, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Crosses & Monuments
At a holy well in Dromavrauka, County Kerry, a plain cross has been cut into a stone by human hands, not once as a formal act of consecration, but gradually, by pilgrims who came to the well and left their mark.
The stone leans against a rock outcrop directly behind All Saints' Well, and it is one of five cross-inscribed stones gathered in the same place, each bearing the quiet evidence of repeated devotional use over an unknown span of time.
Holy wells occupy a peculiar position in Irish religious life, blending pre-Christian reverence for water sources with Catholic practice in ways that were never fully resolved by either tradition. The custom of visiting such sites, often on a feast day associated with the well's patron, frequently involved circuits of prayer, the tying of offerings to nearby trees, and sometimes the physical act of incising a cross into stone as a form of petition or thanksgiving. At Dromavrauka, that accumulated habit has produced a small concentration of marked stones around All Saints' Well. The cross on this particular stone is described simply as plain, without ornament or inscription beyond the form itself, which makes it harder to date with any precision but does nothing to diminish its interest. The repetition of the gesture across five separate stones in the same location suggests a site that attracted sustained use rather than a single episode of marking.