Holy/saint's stone, Carrickatober, Co. Cavan
Co. Cavan |
Holy Sites & Wells
In the townland of Carrickatober in County Cavan, there is a stone with a name.
It is classified as a holy or saint's stone, a category of monument that tends to resist easy explanation. These are typically large rocks bearing cup-shaped depressions, crosses, or footprint-like impressions, and they are associated across Ireland with early Christian saints or, in some cases, with much older ritual uses that were later absorbed into Christian tradition. The water that collects in their hollows was often believed to have curative properties, and local communities maintained relationships with such stones across centuries, sometimes across millennia.
Carrickatober itself is a place-name worth pausing over. The element "carrick" derives from the Irish "carraig", meaning rock, which raises the quiet possibility that the stone in question may have given its name, directly or indirectly, to the land around it. Beyond that, the documentary record for this particular monument is thin. What can be said is that Co. Cavan sits within a landscape extraordinarily dense with early medieval and prehistoric remains, and that saint's stones of this type are found throughout Ulster and Connacht, often close to holy wells, ancient routeways, or the sites of long-vanished churches.