Holy well, Dromalour, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Holy Sites & Wells
Some sacred sites announce themselves with carved stone, votive offerings, or a trickle of water catching the light.
This one in Dromalour, County Cork, offers none of that. There is only a south-facing slope of ordinary pasture, and the knowledge, still carried locally, that a holy well once existed here. No water rises, no whitethorn marks the spot, and nothing visible on the ground distinguishes it from the surrounding field.
Writing in 1934, a scholar named Bowman recorded that the well had been drained many years prior and that the attendant whitethorn tree had been cut down. That detail about the tree is quietly significant: whitethorn, or hawthorn, was almost universally associated with holy wells across Ireland, regarded as a threshold plant with protective and sacred properties. Its removal, like the draining of the well itself, would have severed the two most tangible markers of a site's identity. What Bowman caught, in other words, was not the well in use but the memory of it, already at some distance from the living tradition. That the location in Dromalour remains known locally even now suggests the memory has proven more durable than the physical fabric it once described.