We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.

Ruined church, Kilcorney, Clare

Location
(53°2′10″N, 9°9′48″W)
Kilcorney
R 22 99
pre-1974 traditional (Republic of Ireland) Clare
now Clare
medieval not confirmed
  • Tessa Garton

Please use this link to cite this page - https://www.crsbi.ac.uk/view-item?i=15426.

Find out how to cite the CRSBI website here.

Description

Ruined nave and chancel,11.58m x 6.4m and 5.18m x 4.72m respectively (Westropp), with only low sections of wall remaining. E gable fallen leaving only base of E window. No features of interest remain in situ, but a carved Romanesque lintel stone lies in the churchyard to the S of the church. There is also a plain font.

History

There is no certain evidence about the founder of the church. The church was recorded in 1302.

Features

Furnishings

Fonts

Loose Sculpture

Comments/Opinions

Westropp (1900) dates the church to the 10thc. and the window to the 11thc. He refers also to fragments of a decorated S doorway. Keane describes the window arch already lying on the ground on the S side of the chancel in 1867. The window probably comes from the E gable and appears to be 12thc. The exterior decoration is similar to that of the E window of Inchicronan, but with the addition of a human head.

Bibliography

M. Keane, Towers and Temples of Ancient Ireland. Dublin 1867, 368.

A. Swinfen, Forgotten Stones; Ancient Church Sites of the Burren and Environs. Dublin 1992, 35.

T.J. Westropp, 'The Antiquities of the Northern Portion of the County of Clare' JRSAI, 30, (1900a), 420-21.

T.J. Westropp, 'The Churches of County Clare, and the origin of the ecclesiastical divisions in that county,' PRIA, 22 (1900b) 133.