Garrynabraher, An Loch, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Utility Structures
There is a field east of Dingle that holds a place in the records of a friary located roughly fifty kilometres away in Tralee, and yet shows absolutely nothing on the ground to confirm it.
No wall, no foundation, no earthwork. The connection exists almost entirely on paper, which is part of what makes the place quietly compelling to anyone interested in how medieval religious communities organised their landholdings across considerable distances.
The link comes from a 1584 survey of the possessions of the Dominican Friary in Tralee, a house of the Order of Preachers founded in the medieval period. Among its recorded properties was described as "a house with 2 acres near the town of Dingle." The Dominicans, like other mendicant orders, commonly held small outlying properties at some remove from their principal house, and this entry suggests the Tralee friars maintained a modest foothold on the Dingle Peninsula. The field name "Garranabraher" is the key piece of evidence here. The name itself derives from the Irish, broadly meaning a garden or enclosure associated with a friar, and the scholar Hickson, writing in 1888, identified this field as the likely location of the property recorded four centuries earlier. Archdall's work on Irish monasteries, published in 1873, provided the documentary thread, and Cuppage drew these sources together in 1986 to note that, whatever once stood here, the foundation was probably never very extensive and has left no visible trace.