Cross, Crossursa, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Crosses & Monuments
In the townland of Crossursa in County Galway, there stands a cross that has given its name to the land around it, a not uncommon occurrence in Ireland where ancient religious or boundary markers became so embedded in a place that the landscape eventually took their identity.
The townland name itself carries the echo of the object, from the Irish "cros", meaning cross, suggesting the monument predates not just the anglicised placename but the administrative layers that followed it across centuries.
Beyond the placename, the details of this particular cross remain elusive. What can be said is that wayside and standing crosses in Connacht range considerably in age and purpose, from early Christian grave markers and pilgrimage stations to later boundary crosses erected to delineate parish or land divisions. Some are elaborately carved; others are simple upright stones with a rough incised cross, easy to overlook if you do not know what you are passing. The fact that a cross merited formal archaeological recognition here points to something considered significant enough to record, even if the specifics of its form, date, and condition are not yet widely documented.