Church, Lackan, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Churches & Chapels
In a small graveyard in Lackan, County Wicklow, the most significant feature is something you could easily walk across without realising what it was.
A gently raised platform of ground, roughly 20 metres by 15 metres and roughly subrectangular in shape, is all that now marks the presence of a church. No walls survive above the surface, no architectural fragments announce themselves. The building has effectively become a topographical anomaly, a slight swelling in the earth on a south-west-facing slope beside a stream.
This kind of earthwork is not unusual in Ireland, but it rewards a moment of attention. When early medieval or later churches fell into ruin and were not rebuilt, their rubble and accumulated debris gradually merged with the soil, leaving a raised platform that later communities continued to treat as sacred ground. The graveyard here persisted even after the church itself was lost, and the burial enclosure, small and rectangular in form, preserves something of the original ecclesiastical layout. Without documentary detail, the precise period of the church's construction and abandonment is difficult to place, but the physical evidence suggests a long period of use followed by gradual disappearance rather than any sudden clearance.
