Mass-rock, Glencraff, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Holy Sites & Wells
In the townland of Glencraff, in County Galway, there is a flat-topped rock that was once an altar.
Mass-rocks are among the more quietly charged survivals in the Irish landscape, ordinary-looking outcrops of stone that served as makeshift places of Catholic worship during the Penal era, roughly the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, when the public practice of the Catholic faith was suppressed under a series of restrictive laws. Priests who said Mass did so illegally, often outdoors, in remote hillside locations where a large flat stone could serve in place of a consecrated altar, and where a lookout could give warning of approaching soldiers or informers. The rock itself was the church.
The Penal Laws, introduced in the decades following the Williamite wars of the 1690s, barred Catholics from owning land above a certain value, holding public office, and practising their religion openly. In practice, enforcement was uneven and varied by region and period, but the threat was real enough that congregations routinely gathered in exposed, difficult terrain rather than risk an indoor assembly. Many such sites became associated with particular priests whose names were remembered locally long after their deaths, and some rocks retain hollows said to have been worn by the repeated placing of chalice and paten. Beyond its classification as a recorded monument in Glencraff, the specific history of this particular site, its associated priest, the families who gathered there, and the dates of its use, has not yet been documented in any publicly available form.