Well, Lorrha, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Utility Structures
A small stone-roofed structure beside a stream in Lorrha shelters a well that no longer holds water, and nobody locally seems to know quite what it was for.
There is no remembered pattern day, no patron saint's name attached to it, no oral tradition of pilgrimage or cure. It sits quietly beside the stream that runs through the old monastic enclosure, its covering partially collapsed, possibly the remnant of a corbelled roof, the kind built by laying stones in overlapping rings without mortar until they close at the top.
What makes the well quietly puzzling is precisely that absence of tradition. Lorrha was an important early Christian monastic site, associated with St. Ruadhan, who is said to have founded a community here in the sixth century. A holy well dedicated to St. Ruadhan stands roughly 145 metres to the north-northeast, and the ruins of a Dominican friary, founded in the medieval period, lie about 155 metres to the west-southwest. This unnamed well sits between them, geographically embedded in a landscape dense with religious history, yet somehow disconnected from the memory of it. The remains of what appears to be a sunken roadway running through the adjacent field suggest the well may date to before 1700, and its position within the monastic precinct raises the possibility of an early Christian association, even if no firm evidence confirms one.
Sunken roadways of this kind, worn down over generations of use into the surrounding ground level, are sometimes a sign of very old, repeated movement through a landscape, the kind of traffic that accumulates around a place people returned to regularly. Whether this well was ever a focus of that kind of attention, or simply a practical water source within the monastic enclosure, is now impossible to say with certainty.

