Church (in ruins), Castledaly, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Churches & Chapels
Some ruins announce themselves with broken gables or moss-covered doorways.
This one barely announces itself at all. In a field of pastureland near Castledaly in County Galway, what was once a medieval church has been reduced to a low, overgrown mound, roughly six metres in each direction, irregular in outline and easy to walk past without a second glance. The only real clue to what once stood here lies not in the mound itself but in a nearby field wall, where a number of cut-stone fragments have been built in among the ordinary stonework, including window mullions, the vertical dividing bars of a window opening, of a type associated with medieval ecclesiastical architecture.
The presence of those reused stones is quietly telling. At some point, probably centuries ago, the building was dismantled or simply quarried for material, its dressed stonework too useful to leave in place. A mullion that once divided a church window now holds up a field boundary. The site sits approximately 230 metres north of a tower house, the kind of fortified residential structure common across Connacht from the later medieval period onwards, which suggests this was once a small local complex of some significance, a place of worship in proximity to a seat of local power. How long the church functioned, who built it, and when it fell out of use are questions the surviving evidence cannot answer.