Holy well, Bray, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Holy Sites & Wells
Along the trackway that climbs toward the summit of Bray Head on Valentia Island, a spring well sits unmarked on any Ordnance Survey map.
It is known locally as Tobar Bachaillín, a name that translates roughly as the well of the little crozier, and that name carries the most intriguing detail attached to the site: a crozier, the hooked pastoral staff associated with bishops and abbots, is reputed to have been found within it. Whether the object was deposited deliberately, lost, or simply the subject of accumulating local memory is not recorded, but the association between a sacred water source and a piece of ecclesiastical metalwork is not without precedent in Ireland, where holy wells were sometimes used as places of safekeeping or votive offering across many centuries.
The well was once enclosed within a drystone structure, a rough but purposeful arrangement of unmortared stone typical of early vernacular building in the west of Ireland, though that structure is now described as very ruined. The tradition that it functioned as a holy well is characterised as vague, which is itself telling. Many such sites exist in a space between active devotion and faded memory, their religious significance kept alive more by name and rumour than by any continuing practice. Dáithí Pochin Mould, writing in 1978, noted the crozier tradition, and it is largely through that reference that the story survives at all.