Cross, Saintdoolaghs, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Crosses & Monuments
A stone cross beside the Malahide road at Saintdoolaghs has quietly shifted position over the centuries, which is not something many crosses can claim.
What stands at the entrance to St. Doolaghs church and graveyard today was, at some point between the medieval period and the late eighteenth century, moved from inside the graveyard to its current spot at the roadside. It is an unusual shape, too: short-armed, with a distinctly triangular head, set on a double-stepped pedestal that lifts it to a height of 1.6 metres.
The relocation is documented thanks to the antiquarian Austin Cooper, who visited the site in the late eighteenth century and recorded the cross as being inside the graveyard at that time. The detail is preserved in Price (1942), suggesting the move to its present roadside position happened sometime after Cooper's visit. The cross itself belongs to a broader Irish tradition of free-standing stone crosses that served as boundary markers, devotional focal points, or indicators of consecrated ground. The triangular head is worth noting; it differs from the more familiar ringed or wheel-headed forms and gives the cross a spare, almost archaic quality.
The cross sits immediately alongside the Malahide road, which means it is visible from a passing car, though easy to miss at speed. St. Doolaghs itself is one of the more unusual ecclesiastical sites in County Dublin, a medieval church with a distinctive tower, and worth taking time over if you are in the area. The cross is accessible without any particular effort, standing in plain sight at the entrance to the churchyard. Its double-stepped pedestal keeps it at a modest but definite presence above ground level, and the short arms are most apparent when you can see the full silhouette against the sky.