Church, Glebe, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Churches & Chapels
In the townland of Glebe in County Galway, there are the remains of a church that sits quietly in the archaeological record, recognised as a monument but not yet fully documented in any publicly accessible form.
The name Glebe itself is a clue to the site's character: a glebe was the parcel of land assigned to a parish clergyman as part of his living, meaning this townland was once tied directly to the workings of an established church. That a church survives here, or the traces of one, fits the pattern precisely.
Beyond that, the specifics of this particular site remain held close. No dates of construction or abandonment have been made available, no patron saint recorded, no detail of the building's plan or fabric. What can be said in general terms is that Galway is scattered with the remnants of early medieval and later ecclesiastical foundations, many of them small parish churches that fell out of use after the upheavals of the Reformation or the shifting of local populations across the centuries. Whether this site belongs to that tradition, or to a later period of Protestant glebe-house parishes, is a question the monument itself has not yet been made to answer in any open record.