Toberelane, Cill Fhaoláin, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Holy Sites & Wells
A stream emerges from beneath a large stone on the Dingle Peninsula, and that, in essence, is all that can be said with certainty about Tobar Faoláin.
Holy wells, which in the Irish tradition are typically natural springs or water sources associated with a named saint and visited for ritual or devotional purposes, often carry dense layers of local lore: patterns, cures, offerings, stories of the saint's life. This one carries almost none. What remains is a stone, a flow of water, and a cross cut into the rock that is probably of modern origin rather than medieval, a quiet anomaly in a landscape otherwise thick with early Christian memory.
The well takes its name from Saint Faolán, and it appears on the Ordnance Survey map of 1842 under the anglicised form Toberelane, with the Irish form Tobar Faoláin recorded separately by the scholar known as An Seabhac. The folklorist Caoimhín Ó Danachair, writing in 1960, noted the name but confirmed that no tradition had survived alongside it. The well sits roughly 200 metres to the north-west of the early ecclesiastical site at Killelane, a proximity that suggests the two were once part of the same devotional landscape, even if the thread connecting them has long since gone slack. Whether the loss of tradition reflects the gradual abandonment of a once-active pattern site, or simply the ordinary erosion of rural memory over generations, is not recorded.