Holy well, Rath More, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Holy Sites & Wells
In the townland of Rath More in County Clare, a holy well sits in the landscape, quietly classified and catalogued yet still largely unrecorded in any publicly accessible form.
Holy wells are among the oldest continuously venerated sites in Ireland, places where pre-Christian water cult practice folded almost seamlessly into Christian devotion, accumulating layers of ritual over many centuries. They were visited for healing, for pattern days, for the tying of cloth offerings to nearby trees, and for the kind of localised, informal religion that rarely made it into official church records but persisted stubbornly in communities nonetheless.
Rath More itself takes its name from the Irish for a large ringfort, those circular earthwork enclosures that dot the Irish countryside and date broadly from the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to the twelfth centuries. The pairing of a holy well with such a place is not unusual. Wells were frequently associated with the boundaries and edges of settled or sacred space, and the presence of a rath nearby would suggest a site with a long history of human activity. Beyond its classification and location within this townland, the documentary record for this particular well remains thin.
Given how little has been formally published about this site, it belongs to that category of Irish monuments that exists more fully in local memory and oral tradition than in any written account. For a county as archaeologically dense as Clare, that is itself a quiet reminder of how much remains undocumented at the local level.