Headstone, Galbally, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Religious Objects
A small slab of stone, barely forty centimetres tall, stands south of the south door of Galbally Church in County Limerick.
What makes it quietly arresting is not its size but its incompleteness. Incised into its worn surface are the words HERE LYETH THE BODY OF MARY ... HIS WIFE, the ellipsis not a stylistic choice but an erasure, the woman's surname and her husband's name lost to centuries of weathering. She is identified only by her first name and her relationship to a man whose own name has since vanished. The stone measures just 44cm wide and 5cm deep, small enough to be easily overlooked among the more assertive monuments that typically populate an Irish churchyard.
The headstone was recorded in the Urban Survey of Limerick, compiled by Bradley and colleagues and published in 1989, which described it as a possible 17th century example. That dating, if accurate, places it in a period when the incised lettering style it displays was becoming more common on Irish funerary monuments, though the stone's condition makes certainty difficult. Galbally Church itself carries its own separate record in the Sites and Monuments Register. The headstone entry was later compiled by archaeologist Caimin O'Brien and uploaded to the national record in September 2019, ensuring this fragment of a woman's memorial was not simply left unacknowledged.
Galbally is a small village in the south of County Limerick, close to the Tipperary border and the foothills of the Galtee Mountains. The church ruin is the starting point for anyone seeking the stone; it sits specifically to the south of the south door, so orientation matters on arrival. The inscription requires close attention given the degree of wear, and low, raking light, the kind that comes with overcast days or early morning, tends to make incised lettering on old stone more legible than direct sunlight does. There is no elaborate monument here, no grand dynastic statement. What remains is a partial name, a marital designation, and a slab that someone once thought sufficient to mark a life.
