Holy well, Carrigillihy, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Holy Sites & Wells
At the rocky shoreline below Carrigillihy, where an east-facing slope drops down to the mouth of Glandore Harbour, a spring seeps out of a crevice in the coastal rock and collects into a small, irregular pool roughly eighty centimetres long and thirty wide.
It is easy to walk past without noticing, and yet the place carries a name that suggests it was once considered anything but incidental. Locally it is known as Tobar na Cille, meaning well of the church, a designation that quietly signals a long-standing connection between this trickle of fresh water and a now largely vanished sacred landscape.
Holy wells in Ireland were typically venerated as places of healing or devotion, their sanctity often tied to a nearby church or patron saint rather than to the water itself. In this case, the association is geographical as much as spiritual. Around a hundred metres to the south-west lie the remains of both a church and a burial ground, and the well's local name, recorded by O'Donoghue in 1986, suggests the three sites were understood as a single complex rather than separate features. The spring flows eastward from the rock face, out toward the harbour mouth, in a configuration shaped entirely by the natural geology of the shore rather than by any human construction.