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Aghowle Church

Aghowle Church
Eaglais Achadh Abhall
Aghowle Church From Entrance.JPG
Aghowle Church is located in Ireland
Aghowle Church
Aghowle Church
52°46′04″N 6°37′14″W / 52.767857°N 6.620430°W / 52.767857; -6.620430Coordinates: 52°46′04″N 6°37′14″W / 52.767857°N 6.620430°W / 52.767857; -6.620430
Location Aghowle Lower, Coolkenno, County Wicklow
Country Ireland
Denomination Pre-Reformation Catholic; Church of Ireland
Architecture
Style Romanesque
Years built 12th century
Specifications
Length 18 m (59 ft)
Width 7.3 m (24 ft)
Materials stone
Administration
Diocese Leighlin
Designations
Designations

Aghowle Church is a medieval church and National Monument in County Wicklow, Ireland.

Aghowle Church is located 1.7 km (1.1 mi) southwest of Coolkenno, near some tributaries of the River Derreen.

It is claimed that a monastery was founded on the site by Finnian of Clonard in the 6th century. They lived in Clocháin (beehive huts) around a wooden church The placename derives from the Irish for "field of apple trees." The present church dates to c. 1100 and was in use by the Church of Ireland until 1716–17.

Local legend tells of a "fugitive bell": apparently St Finnian erected a belfry at Aghowle, but later moved the bell to his other monastery at Clonard. One day it vanished and reappeared at Aghowle, and, despite several attempts at removing it, the bell kept on returning to Aghowle.

The church is a long rectangular building with high gables of which the original north, east and west walls survive. The west doorway is lintelled on the outside and arched inside. It has Romanesque moulding on the outside and a draw-bar socket. Two round-headed windows in the east wall have hood mouldings on the outside supported by pillars.

To the northeast of the church is a 2.8 m (9 ft 2 in) high imperforate ringed granite high cross, possibly unfinished, standing on a pyramidal base known as St Finden's Cross. There are sunken panels in the shaft and underneath the arms. It dates to approximately the 10th century.

Located on the eastern side of the cross is a large granite baptismal font (130 × 73 cm; 4′3″ × 2′5″) which is believed to be pre-Norman. Local tradition claimed that water from the font could cure headaches.


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