Church, Ballynakill, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Churches & Chapels
What remains of a medieval parish church at Ballynakill, on the western bank of the King's Channel, a loop of the River Suir in County Waterford, is not a ruin in any conventional sense. There are no walls to speak of, no arch framing the sky, no nave to pace out. Instead, what survives is a roughly ten-metre-square enclosure of masonry, some of it salvaged from the church itself, enclosing a small family graveyard. Set into those walls is a stoup, a small stone basin once used to hold holy water at a church entrance, here repurposed or simply absorbed as the building collapsed around it.
The church at Ballynakill was already well-established by 1302, when it appeared in an ecclesiastical taxation under the name Ballymakill, assessed at 4.5 marks. By 1615, a visitor noted that the chancel was ruinous, suggesting the building had been in decline for some time. The deterioration continued, and when Ordnance Survey researchers passed through in 1841, they found that the church had entirely vanished. What they recorded in its place was a small graveyard belonging to the Dobbyns family, the only visible trace of a site that had once served a parish. That enclosure, and the absorbed fragments of the church within its walls, still stand today, adjacent to the site of a Ballynakill tower house. A 2005 study by P. Grogan examined both the graveyard and the Dobbyns family connection in some detail, placing the physical remnant within a longer local history.