Church, Taghshinny, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Churches & Chapels
One of the more quietly peculiar things about the graveyard on the northern edge of Taghshinny village in County Longford is that the medieval church it once held has left almost no trace above ground.
The 18th-century Church of Ireland building that now occupies the centre of the burial ground may sit close to where the earlier church stood, and the whole layered succession, medieval, post-Reformation, Georgian, survives as a kind of compressed history in a single field beside a stream. What makes the site genuinely strange is not absence but survival in unexpected form: two architectural fragments, both found in rubble near the graveyard's northern wall, suggest the medieval church may have been a more complex structure than a simple rural chapel.
The annals record a church at Taghshinny as early as the 1220s, possibly connected to the monastery on Inchcleraun, an island site in Lough Ree with early medieval origins. By 1475, a priest named Thomas Macmurhyrtay was recorded as serving the parish church, and in 1542 the rectory was leased to Walter Tirrell of Dublin. The site appears on an early 17th-century map of Shrule barony, and a 1620 land grant to James McConnell Farrall carried the condition that he hold an annual fair at Taghshinny on 29 June, the feast of St Peter the Apostle. The 18th-century church may itself incorporate fabric from a 17th-century building erected by the Annelly family of Tennalick. Among the fragments found near the northern wall is a nearly square carved block bearing rosette decoration in each corner and, at its centre, an openwork triskele enclosed by a band of rope-moulding in false relief. The two lower rosettes appear unfinished, lightly incised rather than fully worked. This block has been interpreted as a possible air vent for a garderobe, a latrine shaft built into the thickness of a wall, which would suggest the medieval church once had domestic quarters or a residential tower attached. A fragment of a tracery window with a glazing groove was also found nearby. The graveyard additionally holds a cross-slab, fragments of a second cross-slab, and several 17th-century graveslabs, one of which is inside the later church building.