Armorial plaque, Bettyville, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Estate Features
A carved stone plaque bearing the arms of one of Ireland's oldest Norman families no longer sits where it was first placed.
For centuries it was set into an external wall of Watermill cottage in Bettyville, a quiet corner of north County Dublin, where it quietly accumulated weather and indifference before eventually being removed to safer keeping.
The plaque records a specific domestic moment: the marriage or household of the St. Lawrence family, who held the Barony of Howth from the medieval period and whose descendants occupy Howth Castle to this day. The arms displayed are those of the 20th Baron of Howth and his wife Elizabeth Plunket, and the plaque is dated 1572, with the initials C. E. carved alongside the heraldic device. An armorial plaque of this kind, a sculpted stone panel bearing a family's coat of arms, was a common way for landed families to mark ownership of a building or assert their presence in the landscape. That this one ended up embedded in a cottage wall rather than a castle facade is itself a small puzzle. Whether it was placed there originally or migrated there over time is not entirely clear from the record, but the date and the names anchor it firmly to the Elizabethan period, when the St. Lawrences were consolidating their position on the Howth peninsula.
The plaque is now lodged at Howth Castle, which sits on the northern edge of the peninsula overlooking Dublin Bay. The castle is not always open to the public in the conventional sense, so it is worth checking access arrangements before making a visit. The cottage at Bettyville where the plaque once sat is in the broader Howth area, and the landscape around it, with its mills and waterways, reflects the working character of the estate in earlier centuries. Those with an interest in heraldry or in the long presence of the St. Lawrence family on this stretch of coastline will find the plaque itself a compact and oddly personal survival, a piece of cut stone that once declared a marriage and a date to anyone passing a cottage wall.