Graveslab, St. Patricksrock, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Tombs & Memorials
On the Rock of Cashel, one of Ireland's most visited medieval sites, it is easy to walk past the things that no longer announce themselves.
In the choir of the cathedral, a fragment of carved stone lies quietly, its original purpose legible only in outline. It is the upper portion of a cross slab, the kind of grave marker that was once incised with a cross and often an inscription identifying the person commemorated beneath it. This one has lost its voice entirely.
When Fitzgerald recorded the slab in the early 1900s, writing it up in a survey published between 1901 and 1903, he noted the inscription as simply illegible. By that point the lettering had already worn beyond recovery, leaving only the general form of the object to indicate what it once was. Cross slabs of this type were common in early medieval Irish Christianity, typically flat stones bearing an incised or relief cross, sometimes accompanied by a name or a request for a prayer on behalf of the deceased. They varied considerably in quality and ambition, from elaborate pieces with interlaced decoration to plain markers that communicated little beyond the bare fact of a burial. This fragment sits at the humbler end of that spectrum now, though whether it always did, or whether time has reduced something once more elaborate, cannot be said.
The slab sits within the cathedral choir on the Rock of Cashel, a complex that includes a round tower, a Romanesque chapel, and the substantial remains of a Gothic cathedral. The choir is the eastern section of the cathedral, where clergy would have gathered for the liturgy, and it is a part of the site that visitors sometimes move through quickly in favour of the more visually prominent features nearby. The slab rewards a slower pace.