Leacht cuimhne, Cill Éinne, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Holy Sites & Wells
Between the old road and the new one, on the bare limestone of Inis Mór, there is a small rectangular structure that most travellers along the Cill Ronáin to Cill Éinne route will never notice.
It sits roughly 85 metres northeast of the present road, following the line of an older track, and it carries no inscription. A drystone pier, just over a metre long and nearly a metre and a half high, supports a limestone pillar on top. A modern animal shelter has been built up against its northwestern face, which gives the whole assembly a quietly incongruous air: ancient memorial and functional farm structure sharing the same exposed rock.
The structure is a leacht cuimhne, a form of commemorative monument built from dry-laid stone, typically erected to mark a death or to serve as a focus for prayer and remembrance at a significant location. This particular example is uninscribed, so whatever or whoever it once commemorated is no longer legible in any direct way. What makes its situation more arresting is the immediate neighbourhood. About 30 metres to the northwest lies a rough-out for a cross, a piece of limestone that was shaped toward becoming a cross but never finished, left in that intermediate state on the open ground. Further still, roughly 90 metres to the south-southwest, there is a cluster of eight more leachtanna cuimhne, suggesting that this part of the old road was once a place of some ritual or funerary significance, a landscape marked repeatedly and deliberately across time rather than by a single act of remembrance.