Ireland’s hidden sacred ground

Throughout Ireland’s lovely and storied countryside, visitors can find magnificent religious sites that are a testament to Ireland’s glorious and tragic history.

Throughout Ireland’s lovely and storied countryside, visitors can find magnificent religious sites that are a testament to Ireland’s glorious and tragic history. Some of the best known include the Rock of Cashel, St. Kevin’s Monastery at Glendalough, and the ancient university of Clonmacnoise.

But in addition to these notable locations, there are numerous ruins of abbeys, monasteries and churches that are not on the tourist maps and little visited. The most cherished in my memory is Quin Abbey, which I came upon quite accidentally on one of my first trips to Ireland.

Quin Abbey in County Clare is almost in the shadow of Shannon Airport but is little known and less visited. I came upon the abbey while seeking a direct road to the nearby Cliffs of Moher, one of Ireland’s most popular scenic wonders. With no one around I climbed over a stone wall and spent several hours exploring the ruins of the abbey and its somber graveyard.

The Franciscan friary dates from the 15th century when the MacNamara family built the cloisters on the remains of a Norman Castle. The abbey was confiscated from the Franciscans in 1541 after England’s Henry VIII suppressed the Catholic Church. For decades the site was in disrepair until the MacNamaras regained control and restored the grounds in 1604. But in 1651 Cromwell’s troops destroyed the abbey again, and massacred the friars.

In 1691 the friars returned and there was a Franciscan presence until 1820, when the last friar living on the ruined grounds died. The abbey was declared a National Monument in 1880.

I have visited Quin Abbey several times and have always marveled at its quiet dignity. Although officially there is caretaker on the site, perhaps because I usually visit “Ireland off season,” I have never encountered one. I have read reviews on TripAdvisor in which visitors, who also came upon the landmark accidentally, have found the caretaker’s recitation of the abbey’s history helpful. But although I would no doubt benefit from this knowledge, something in me prefers visiting Quin Abbey when no one else is around, when I can walk among the ruins and try to imagine what it was like in its era of spiritual activity. It is something that I, for one, find inspiring in today’s secular world.

Quin Abbey is nine miles from the town of Ennis in County Clare and there are directional signs on local roads. In the Franciscan spirit, there is no charge for visiting the grounds. There is a bar/restaurant across the street that has received favorable reviews for lunch and a Catholic church nearby that serves the village.

In addition to Quin Abbey, some other religious sites that are off the beaten track are Timoleague Friary near Kinsale, County Cork, and Holy Cross Abbey in Tipperary, The latter is one of the few ancient religious sites in Ireland restored completely as a parish church.

About the author

Avatar of Linda Hohnholz

Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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