Saint Bridget's Well, Mulrankin, Co. Wexford

Co. Wexford |

Holy Sites & Wells

Saint Bridget’s Well, Mulrankin, Co. Wexford

A small stone-lined hollow at the foot of a whitethorn tree, barely half a metre across, is not the kind of thing that announces itself.

Yet this unassuming well in Mulrankin, County Wexford, carries a question in its name that has never quite been settled. The Ordnance Survey mapped it twice, in 1839 and again in 1940, marking it on both occasions in gothic lettering as St. Bridget's Well. Gothic lettering on OS maps was the conventional way of signalling an antiquity or a site of traditional significance, so the cartographers clearly considered it worth noting. But the music historian and ecclesiastical scholar W.H. Grattan Flood, writing in 1915, argued that the well was originally dedicated not to Brigid but to St. Catherine, which would give the site a rather different devotional character and raises the possibility that the Brigid attribution, however long-established on paper, may have displaced an older local memory.

The well sits in a fairly level stretch of landscape, with a small north-south stream running just to its west. It is a modest construction: a subcircular hollow lined with stones, roughly 55 centimetres across and 50 centimetres deep, with a large flat stone embedded in the ground nearby. Holy wells in Ireland were traditionally sites of pattern days and rounds, where people would pray, leave offerings, and walk a prescribed circuit, but there is no sign that this one was used in that way, at least not in recent memory. What gives the spot a quietly layered quality is its immediate surroundings. The remains of Mulrankin church lie about 160 metres to the north, and a tower house, the kind of fortified residential structure common to late medieval Leinster, stands approximately 100 metres to the south-southwest. The well occupies a point within a small cluster of monuments, each from a different register of local life, ecclesiastical, domestic, and devotional, gathered within a few hundred metres of one another on an otherwise unremarkable piece of ground.

Rated 0 out of 5

Visitor Notes

Review type for post source and places source type not found
Added by
Picture of Pete F
Pete F
IrishHistory.com is passionate about helping people discover and connect with the rich stories of their local communities.
Please use the form below to submit any photos you may have of Saint Bridget’s Well, Mulrankin, Co. Wexford. We're happy to take any suggested edits you may have too. Please be advised it will take us some time to get to these submissions. Thank you.
Name
Email
Message
Upload images/documents
Maximum file size: 100 MB
If you'd like to add an image or a PDF please do it here.

Advertisement