Church, Cappanaleigh, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Churches & Chapels
A church that has entirely disappeared beneath the ground it once sanctified is an unusual thing, but that is precisely what seems to have happened at Cappanaleigh in North Tipperary.
A medieval church known as Templeougher once occupied the north-western corner of what is now the local graveyard, but the building has left no trace above ground. No cut stone, no carved fragment, no collapsed wall survives. The space it occupied is today filled with graves and headstones, the community of the dead having quietly claimed the footprint of the building that once served them.
The hillock on which this site sits slopes south-eastward down to the main graveyard, suggesting the church held the commanding position on higher ground that was common for early ecclesiastical foundations. The name Templeougher, from the Irish teampall, meaning church, points to a pre-Reformation origin, though nothing in the surviving record pins down exactly when the structure was built or when it fell out of use. By 1903, when the Ordnance Survey published its six-inch map of the area, the site was already being recorded simply as "Templeougher (site of)", an annotation that speaks volumes about how thoroughly the building had vanished by that point. The graveyard itself has since expanded southward, further altering the original layout. The earliest dated headstone in the burial ground belongs to 1700, and at least two eighteenth-century stones survive in the north-eastern quadrant, one dated 1734 and another 1761, while most of the other monuments belong to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
