Graveslab, Mothel, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Tombs & Memorials
Inside the ruins of the Augustinian abbey at Mothel, County Waterford, a limestone graveslab lies in the south transept, easy to overlook and difficult to date with precision, yet carrying on its surface a level of decorative ambition that sets it apart from plainer burial markers of the region. Measuring 2.15 metres long and 0.9 metres wide, it is carved with an interlace cross, the kind of interwoven knotwork pattern associated with early and medieval Irish stone carving, alongside a rounded calvary, a representation of the hill of Golgotha that in graveslab carving typically appears as a stepped or domed base beneath the cross.
The abbey itself was an Augustinian foundation, part of the network of monasteries established by that order across medieval Ireland from the twelfth century onwards. The Augustinians, known formally as the Order of the Hermits of Saint Augustine, became one of the most active religious orders in late medieval Munster, and their houses frequently accumulated local patronage, burial rights, and the kinds of carved commemorative stonework that this slab represents. Mothel abbey, situated in the Waterford countryside, would have served as a place of burial for families of local significance, and a slab of this scale and finish suggests a person of some standing, even if no inscription survives to name them.