Graveslab, Loughrea, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Tombs & Memorials
Loughrea, the County Galway town that grew up around a Carmelite friary and a Norman de Burgh stronghold, holds in its fabric a graveslab, one of those pieces of carved stonework that tend to be passed over in favour of more legible monuments.
Graveslabs, as a category, are among the quieter survivors of medieval and early modern Ireland: flat or slightly tapered slabs laid over a burial, often incised with a cross, a sword, or a floriate pattern that identified the deceased by trade or status at a time when few names were committed to stone.
Unfortunately, the surviving documentation for this particular slab is not yet available in any accessible form, which means the specific details that would place it firmly in time, give it a patron, or link it to a particular ecclesiastical site in the Loughrea area remain out of reach for now. Loughrea itself has genuine medieval depth, centred on St Brendan's Cathedral and the remains of the Carmelite priory founded in the late thirteenth century, and graveslabs associated with such foundations were typically carved by regional workshops whose output can sometimes be dated and attributed through stylistic comparison. Whether this slab belongs to that tradition, or is of a different period entirely, cannot be said with any confidence at present.