Cross, Cill Mhuirbhigh, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Crosses & Monuments
Cill Mhuirbhigh, known in English as Kilmurvey, sits on the largest of the Aran Islands, Inis Mór, at the foot of the great prehistoric hill-fort of Dún Aonghasa.
The placename itself points to an early ecclesiastical foundation, with "cill" denoting a church or monastic cell of the early Christian period, and the presence of a recorded cross in such a location is entirely in keeping with the pattern of small, often overlooked devotional monuments that punctuate the island's ancient landscape. Aran is unusually dense with early medieval stonework, and a standing or inscribed cross associated with a named ecclesiastical site would typically mark either a boundary, a place of prayer, or the memory of a founding saint.
The precise form and condition of this particular cross are not fully documented in available sources, which is itself a quiet reminder of how much early Irish stonework remains under-described. Crosses of this type on the Aran Islands range from simple incised slabs, where a cross is scratched into flat limestone, to more substantial free-standing examples. The ecclesiastical settlement at Kilmurvey is thought to be of early medieval origin, consistent with the broader pattern of monastic activity across Ára na Naomh, the Island of the Saints, as Aran was traditionally known. That reputation was earned by the number of early Christian foundations clustered across the three islands, many of them associated with figures whose lives are now preserved only in fragmentary hagiography.