Graveslab, Athasselabbey, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Tombs & Memorials
Tucked partially beneath a tomb niche in the south wall of Athassel Abbey's chancel lies a small limestone graveslab that carries no name, no date, and no decorative carving.
It identifies nobody. It commemorates nothing legible. And yet its precise position has been recorded to the centimetre, sitting 11.25 metres from the east gable of one of medieval Ireland's most expansive monastic ruins.
Athassel was an Augustinian house, a community following the Rule of St Augustine rather than the stricter monastic traditions of the Cistercians or Benedictines, and in its medieval prime it ranked among the largest priories in Ireland. The graveslab itself is modest by any measure: a tapering rectangle of limestone, 0.66 metres long and narrowing slightly from top to base, with a chamfer, meaning a bevelled or angled edge, running along both sides to a width of around eight centimetres. Maher, writing in 1997, found no trace of an inscription or carved design, which makes it difficult to assign the slab to any individual or period with confidence. Whether it was always plain or whether any surface detail has simply worn away over centuries of exposure and disturbance is impossible to say.
What makes the slab quietly curious is its situation rather than its appearance. It sits partly underneath a tomb niche, suggesting either that it predates the niche's construction, or that it was moved and partially covered at some point during the abbey's long and complicated history. A graveslab of this size would typically mark a modest burial rather than a person of high status, who would more likely have warranted a full effigy or an elaborate canopied tomb. This one, anonymous and partially obscured, has ended up sheltering beneath architecture that was almost certainly built to honour someone else entirely.