Molahiffe Church (in rRuins), Castlefarm, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Churches & Chapels
What survives of the old parish church at Molahiffe is, in strict architectural terms, almost nothing: an east gable standing around six metres high and a fragment of south wall less than two metres tall.
And yet that east gable preserves something quietly remarkable. The central window, a single round-headed light framed in chiselled brown sandstone, remains largely intact. Inside, the embrasure splays widely, nearly a metre and a half across at its broadest, funnelling whatever light comes through into the body of a church that no longer exists around it. The window faces a graveyard that has been in continuous use as the common burial ground of the neighbourhood, meaning the ruins sit not as an isolated monument but in the middle of an active place of the dead.
By the time the scholar John O'Donovan recorded the site in 1841, the church had already been a ruin for the better part of a century. A survey from 1756 noted it in that condition, and O'Donovan's own meticulous description, measuring the wall thickness at three feet two inches and noting that the sandstone window surround was intact on both faces, carries the slightly melancholy precision of a man documenting something already far gone. He suspected the church was the Domhnach Mór Maighe Laithimh mentioned in early Irish sources, a phrase meaning roughly the great church of the plain of Laithimh, which would place its origins in the early medieval period. Whether or not that identification holds, the church was certainly significant enough to appear in the Papal Taxation List of 1302 to 1307, a survey of ecclesiastical income compiled to assess contributions to Rome, which places Molahiffe firmly within the organised parish structure of late medieval Munster. The masonry itself, large limestone blocks bonded with lime mortar, is consistent with medieval construction, and some of the original window jambs remain in place. About a hundred metres to the north, the remains of Molahiffe Castle add a further layer to what was clearly a place of some local consequence.

