Holy well, Noughaval, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Holy Sites & Wells
Noughaval, a small parish in the Burren of County Clare, is home to a holy well that belongs to a tradition older than the Christian framework that eventually absorbed it.
Holy wells across Ireland were venerated long before the arrival of Christianity, and many were later rededicated to local saints, becoming sites of pattern days, the communal gatherings of prayer and ritual that once punctuated the Irish calendar. The well at Noughaval sits within a landscape already dense with early medieval remains, including one of the finer Romanesque parish churches in Clare, which gives the site a layered quality that is more felt than immediately visible.
Noughaval itself takes its name from the Irish Nuachongbháil, meaning roughly "new foundation" or "new establishment", which suggests an early ecclesiastical settlement of some significance. The parish church nearby displays carved stonework characteristic of the twelfth-century Romanesque style, and the area around it preserves an atmosphere of long, quiet continuity. Holy wells in such settings often functioned as focal points for seasonal ritual, particularly on the feast day of a patron saint, when the practice of "doing the rounds", walking a prescribed circuit while reciting prayers, would draw people from the surrounding townlands.