Donaghcumper Church | |
---|---|
Old Donaghcumper Church; Donacomper, Donnacompare, Donnacompar, Dennycomfert, Downecumper, Donaghcomper, Donocomfert, Donocomper | |
Domhnach Compair [1] | |
53°20′23″N6°31′41″W / 53.339782°N 6.527978°W Coordinates: 53°20′23″N6°31′41″W / 53.339782°N 6.527978°W | |
Location | Donaghcumper, Celbridge, County Kildare |
Country | Ireland |
Denomination | Church of Ireland |
Previous denomination | Pre-Reformation Catholic |
History | |
Founded | 12th century |
Dedication | Saint Brigid [2] |
Architecture | |
Functional status | ruined |
Closed | 18th century |
Specifications | |
Materials | limestone, mortar |
Administration | |
Province | Dublin and Cashel |
Diocese | Dublin and Glendalough |
Parish | Celbridge & Straffan with Newcastle Lyons |
Donaghcumper Church is a ruined medieval church in Celbridge, Ireland. [3] On the Record of Monuments and Places it bears the code KD011-013. [4] [5]
Donaghcumper Church is located 800 m (½ mile) east of Celbridge town centre, on the R403 road (Dublin Road). [6] [7] [8]
This may have been a Christian site as early as the 5th century. The name means "church of the confluence"; the word Domhnach (from Latin dominica, "of the Lord") is traditionally assumed (due to a note in the 9th-century Book of Armagh) to belong to the earliest churches in Ireland. [9] The River Shinkeen, a small stream, enters the River Liffey 550 m to the north of Donaghcumper. A Domnach Combair appears in the Vita tripartita Sancti Patricii (9th century), although that appears to be located in Dál nAraidi, in the northeast of Ireland. [10]
The earliest part of the church was built c. 1150–60, around the time of the Norman invasion of Ireland. In 1202 control of the church was given to St. Wolstan's Priory by the de Hereford family (Adam de Hereford and descendants). Cut-stone windows were added in the 14th century (c. 1340). [11]
The church was suppressed in the Reformation and the lands acquired by John Alan, Lord Chancellor of Ireland. He was buried at Donaghcumper in 1561, as was his nephew John Alen in 1616, and John's son Sir Thomas Alen, 1st Baronet in 1627. Donaghcumper became a Church of Ireland (Anglican Protestant) church and was active for about 200 years. [12] In 1690, a James Warren was parish priest.
A sketch of 1770 shows the church with a roof and a tower in the west end. A map of 1783 lists the site as Ch. Rs. (church ruins) and the 1897 map lists it as ruinous. [13] However, the church is surrounded by a still-active graveyard; the earliest-dated grave still legible is that of a Nicholas Walsh, died 1711.
In 2000 some renovation took place, and in 2017 funding of €7,500 was allocated. [14] [15]
Portions of the nave and chancel remain. The Alen vault is located at the east end of the chancel. The east gable has an ogee window, and the west gable has a belfry. A round semicircular arch divides nave and chancel, and there is a gabled porch in the south end and a piscina in the east. Of the tower in the west, only one wall remains. [16] The buildings are held up by temporary buttresses and the church is fenced off to avoid injury to the public.
Newbridge, officially known by its Irish name Droichead Nua, is a town in County Kildare, Ireland. While the nearby Great Connell Priory was founded in the 13th century, the town itself formed from the 18th century onwards, and grew rapidly alongside a military barracks which opened in the early 19th century. Taking on the name Newbridge in the 20th century, the town expanded to support the local catchment, and also as a commuter town for Dublin. Doubling in population during the 20 years between 1991 and 2011, its population of 22,742 in 2016 makes it the largest town in Kildare and the fifteenth-largest in Ireland.
Celbridge is a town and townland on the River Liffey in County Kildare, Ireland. It is 23 km (14 mi) west of Dublin. Both a local centre and a commuter town within the Greater Dublin Area, it is located at the intersection of the R403 and R405 regional roads. As of the 2016 census, Celbridge was the third largest town in County Kildare by population, with over 20,000 residents.
Kilcrea Friary is a ruined medieval abbey located near Ovens, County Cork, Ireland. Both the friary and Kilcrea Castle, located in ruin to the west, were built by Observant Franciscans in the mid 15th century under the invitation of Cormac Láidir MacCarthy, Lord of Muskerry, as protection from English troops.
Cannistown Church is a medieval church and National Monument in County Meath, Ireland.
Thomastown Church is a medieval church and National Monument in County Kilkenny, Ireland.
St. Francis Abbey, also called Kilkenny Grey Friary, is a medieval Franciscan abbey and National Monument located in Kilkenny City, Ireland.
St. Mary's Church is a medieval church and National Monument in New Ross, Ireland.
Coole Upper Churches are medieval churches forming a National Monument in County Cork, Ireland.
Tea Lane Graveyard is a Christian cemetery located in Celbridge, Ireland.
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Mungret Abbey is a medieval friary and National Monument located in County Limerick, Ireland.
Portumna Abbey is a medieval Cistercian friary and National Monument located in Portumna, Ireland.
Kilbennen or Kilbannon is a medieval ecclesiastical site and National Monument located in County Galway, Ireland.
Straffan Parish Church is a Gothic Revival Church of Ireland church in Straffan, Ireland, completed in 1838.
Clane Friary, also called Clane Abbey, is a former friary of the Order of Friars Minor Conventual located in Clane, Ireland.
In Gaelic Ireland, between the 5th and 9th centuries AD, a dairthech was a type of oratory or church built of oak-wood.
St. Wolstan's Priory is a former Augustinian (Victorine) monastery located in County Kildare, Ireland.
Reeves Castle is a 14th-century tower house (castle) located in County Kildare, Ireland. On the Record of Monuments and Places it bears the codes KD015-001 (enclosure) and KD015-002.
St. Declan's Monastery, containing the remains of Ardmore Cathedral, is a former monastery and National Monument located in County Waterford, Ireland.
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