Cross-inscribed stone (present location), Lullymore, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Crosses & Monuments
A small sandstone slab, barely twenty-five centimetres long and twenty wide, carries one of the more quietly affecting pieces of early Christian carving in County Kildare. Cut into its face is a broad, sunken Latin cross, its head and arm terminals splayed outward with evident care, and at its base the suggestion of a pedestal, now broken. The stone is unassuming in scale, but the quality of the carving, described by researcher M. Kelly as "Cross 6" in a 2006 study, points to a maker who knew exactly what they were doing.
The slab did not begin its life where it now sits. It originated at the early monastic site at Lullymore East, one of those low-profile ecclesiastical enclosures scattered across the Irish midlands that functioned as centres of religious and community life in the early medieval period. At some point it was moved, along with at least six other cross-inscribed stones and two free-standing crosses from the same site, and incorporated into a memorial connected to the events of 1798, the year of the United Irish rebellion. That gathering of ancient stones around a modern monument of grief and commemoration gives the group an unusual layered character; objects shaped by one kind of faith repurposed to mark a very different kind of loss. A further stone from Lullymore East was relocated to the nearby Bog of Allen Nature Centre Museum.
The 1798 memorial in Lullymore West is accessible to visitors, and seeing the cross-inscribed stones gathered around it offers a chance to consider how readily earlier material was pressed into later commemorative use, not from carelessness, but from a sense that old sacred objects lent weight and continuity to new occasions of mourning.
