Holy well, Ballingaddy North, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Holy Sites & Wells
Some holy wells in Ireland are still garlanded with offerings, visited on pattern days, and tended by people who can recite generations of local tradition.
The well at Ballingaddy North, County Limerick, is not one of those. It is a place that has outlasted everything that once gave it meaning, sitting in the landscape as a kind of quiet archaeological fact: a well that was sacred, and is no longer, and nobody quite remembers the transition.
The folklorist Caoimhín Ó Danachair, writing in 1955, noted that the site appeared on the Ordnance Survey map of 1840 under the name Lady's Well, a dedication that almost certainly referred to the Virgin Mary, as was common with holy wells of this type across Munster and beyond. By the time Ó Danachair recorded it, the well still existed and was locally acknowledged as having been a holy well, but he found no devotions attached to it and no surviving traditions of any kind. The pattern, the prayers, the rounds, the offerings, whatever rituals may once have drawn people here on a particular feast day, had all quietly ceased, leaving no trace in local memory.
Holy wells were typically visited on the feast day of their patron saint, or in the case of a Lady's Well, around a Marian feast, with people walking a set circuit called "the rounds" and reciting prescribed prayers. The complete absence of any such tradition at Ballingaddy North, even by the mid-twentieth century, suggests the devotional life of the well had lapsed well before living memory. What remains is the physical fact of the well itself, recorded on a nineteenth-century map with a name that implies earlier religious significance, and confirmed still present by a researcher who found little else to say about it. For anyone with an interest in the archaeology of popular religion, that gap between the name and the silence is, in its own way, informative.