Headstone, Donnybrook West, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Religious Objects
In a Dublin graveyard more commonly associated with the modern city's busy southside, a single headstone survives from an era when the area was still largely rural, its inscription recording two names from a world that has almost entirely vanished.
The stone, catalogued under the Sites and Monuments Record reference DU018-060010-, commemorates Thomas Jordan and Catherine Hanon, and carries a date of 1629, making it a rare physical trace of early seventeenth-century life in this part of County Dublin.
The year 1629 places the stone in a period of considerable upheaval across Ireland, just decades after the Nine Years' War and amid ongoing social and religious tension under English administration. Headstones bearing legible inscriptions from this period are uncommon in Ireland; the practice of marking individual graves with carved, inscribed stones was not yet widespread among ordinary people, and many that did exist have since been lost to weathering, clearance, or simple neglect. That this example has survived, and that its names can still be read, is largely a matter of fortune. The details of Thomas Jordan and Catherine Hanon, and the identification of the stone itself, were recorded through the personal communication of Danny Parkinson, to whom credit for preserving this piece of local knowledge is due.
The graveyard lies in the Donnybrook West townland, and the site is accessible to those familiar with the area, though it rewards a patient look around rather than a quick glance. Early gravestones of this age are often worn, and the inscriptions can be difficult to read in bright overhead light; an overcast day, or a visit in the lower light of morning or late afternoon, tends to bring carved lettering into better relief. Visitors should look carefully at the older sections of the graveyard, where the stone's relatively modest scale means it can be easily overlooked among later, larger monuments.