Holy well, Ballingurteen, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Holy Sites & Wells
Some holy wells are marked by rags tied to thorn bushes, by carved stone basins worn smooth from generations of hands, or by small grottos that have accumulated votive offerings over centuries.
The one at Ballingurteen in west Cork has none of these things. There is no visible surface trace whatsoever, and the small stream on whose western bank it once sat has since been drained entirely. What remains is, in a sense, nothing at all, which is precisely what makes it worth thinking about.
Holy wells occupy a peculiar position in the Irish landscape, sitting at the intersection of pre-Christian water veneration and later Catholic devotional practice. They were typically associated with a patron saint, visited on a specific feast day, and credited with curative or protective powers, particularly for ailments of the eyes and skin. The well at Ballingurteen would once have belonged to this tradition, a local focal point for ritual and communal gathering. At some point, however, the stream was drained, most likely as part of land improvement works of the kind that reshaped rural Ireland during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when agricultural drainage became both a practical priority and, in the post-Famine decades, a government-sponsored undertaking. The water that fed the well, and gave it its meaning, simply ceased to flow.