Saint Patrick's Cross, Crosspatrick, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Crosses & Monuments
In a pasture field in County Mayo, a small flat slab lies partly sunk into the grass, its surface so weathered that the cross carved into it is nearly gone.
You would not notice it without looking carefully, and even then the design reveals itself more to the fingertip than to the eye, the shallow incised grooves still traceable beneath the erosion. For a stone that has been formally named on Ordnance Survey maps since at least 1838, it keeps itself remarkably quiet.
The slab is modest in scale, roughly rectangular and measuring about 43 centimetres by 37 centimetres, with rounded corners and a thickness of less than a centimetre. Carved into one face is an equal-armed cross, its lines cut to a width of around two centimetres, extending almost to the full edges of the stone. Where each arm ends, the groove widens into a small circular hollow, a detail that suggests some care in the original execution even if the overall workmanship was never elaborate. The place-name Crosspatrick, and the stone's designation as St Patrick's Cross on both the 1838 and 1929 six-inch Ordnance Survey maps, ties it into the broader Irish tradition of early Christian memorial and boundary markers, though nothing in the surviving record pins down exactly when or by whom it was made. The stone does not stand alone in its field: immediately to its west lies a second inscribed stone, the remnant of an old field bank runs just to the east of the pair, and some 70 metres to the south-east sits a ringbarrow, a low circular earthwork of the kind associated with prehistoric burial. The clustering of these features suggests the ground here has carried significance across more than one period.
The field is bordered to the north by a minor road, and on the far side of that road, roughly 30 metres away, stand a church and graveyard. The cross-slab itself lies on the ground surface, partially embedded in the sod, so finding it requires either local knowledge or a slow walk across the pasture with your eyes low.
