Graveslab, St. Dominicks Abbey, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Tombs & Memorials
On the floor of St. Dominick's Abbey in County Tipperary, close to the east wall of the south transept, lies a graveslab that most visitors would walk straight past.
It is lying flat, face up, and unless the light catches it at a particular angle, the decoration carved into its surface is almost impossible to read. That near-invisibility is part of what makes it worth pausing over.
The slab is a tapered limestone piece, wider at the head end than the foot, measuring just over 1.8 metres in length. Only about eight millimetres of its thickness is visible above the ground surface, suggesting it has settled, or been buried, over centuries. What ornamentation survives is confined to the upper portion of the stone, where incised lines, cut directly into the limestone rather than raised in relief, form the remains of three double-ringed circles. These concentric ring motifs appear on medieval Irish graveslabs with some regularity, and while their precise meaning is debated, they are generally understood as a decorative or symbolic convention of the period rather than a personal emblem. The slab was described by Maher in 1997, and even at that point the decoration was only partially discernible, which gives some sense of how much the stone has weathered or been worn by foot traffic over time. St. Dominick's Abbey itself is a Dominican foundation, and the order, established in the thirteenth century, typically placed great importance on the church interior as a place of burial for patrons and community members alike, making floor slabs like this one a common feature of surviving Dominican ruins across Ireland.