Killone Abbey

Coordinates: 52°48′22.32″N 9°0′15.62″W / 52.8062000°N 9.0043389°W / 52.8062000; -9.0043389
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Killone Abbey
Religion
AffiliationAugustinian Pre-Reformation Catholic
Location
Killone Abbey is located in Ireland
Killone Abbey
Shown within Ireland
Geographic coordinates52°48′22.32″N 9°0′15.62″W / 52.8062000°N 9.0043389°W / 52.8062000; -9.0043389
Architecture
Groundbreakingfounded c.1189 (or monks founded 1120)
Materialssandstone
Website
http://www.newhall.ie

Killone Abbey (Irish: Mainistir Chill Eoin[1]), situated in Killone, some 5 kilometres south of Ennis, County Clare, was a nunnery and abbey of Canonesses Regular founded in 1190 by Donal Mor O'Brien (Donal ‘the Great’ O’Brien), King of Thomond and Munster and dedicated to Saint John. It lies on the banks of Killone Lake.

The ruins of the abbey, accessible through land used for grazing cattle, are located in the grounds of Newhall House and Estate and include substantial remains of the abbey church together with a crypt. A narrow stone stairway leads between the altar and the east window to a ledge atop the remains of the south wall of the church, where an overview of the grounds may be seen with care.

Saint John's Holy Well[edit]

St John’s well, a holy well and altar to the northeast of the nunnery, lies on the edge of Killone Abbey. An inscription records that the altar was last repaired by an Ennis merchant, Anthony Roche, in 1731. The altar is topped with several ‘cursing stones’ used for keeping count of the pilgrims’ rounds at the well. The rounds are associated with a Pilgrim’s Road connecting the site to Ennis town, although the nunnery itself does not form part of the well rounds.[2]

There is an outside mass each year in June held by the local parish.

Folklore[edit]

Folklore has recorded so-called ‘corpse lights’ in the ruins of Killone, as well as at many other graveyards in Co. Clare. Killone Lake is also associated with the tale of a mermaid captured by one of the O’ Briens. He took her home, where she remained until it is said a fool tried to make her speak by throwing boiling water at her. Running back to the lake, she vowed:

“As the return of the salmon from the stream,

A return without blood or flesh,

May such be the departure of the O’Briens,

Like ears of wild corn from Killone.”

Soon after this curse, the O’ Briens vanished from Killone, never to possess it again.[2]

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Cill Eoin/Killone". Logainm.ie. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Monastic Ireland". Monastic.ie. 14 April 2024.

Sources[edit]

  • Glichrist, R., Gender and Material Culture: The Archaeology of Religious Women, (London, 1994)
  • Ó Dálaigh, B., ‘Mistress, Mother and Abbess: Renalda Ní Bhriain c.1447-1510’ in North Munster Antiquarian Journal, 32, (1990) pp 50-63.
  • O’Keeffe, T.  An Anglo-Norman Monastery: Bridgetown Priory and the Architecture of the Augustinian Canons Regular in Ireland, (Cork, 1999)
  • Westropp, T.J., ‘The Augustinian Houses of the County Clare: Clare, Killone and Inchicronan’ in Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, (1900) pp 118-135.

External links[edit]