ANCIENT CHURCHES OF INISHOWEN
"How beautiful they stand
Those old grey churches of our native land!
Amid the pasture fields and dark green woods,
Amid the mountain's cloudy solitudes;
Each in its little plot of holy ground."
by Landon
Though Inishowen's magnificent series of early crosses shows it
to have been an important centre of Christianity, the remains of
its ancient churches are on the whole disappointing. Many have been
rebuilt in the 17th or 18th century; others have disappeared sometimes
so completely that even the graveyards surrounding them are remembered
only by tradition.
The wild mountains of Inishowen would never have borne much timber,
so we should not expect these remains showing evidence of timber-construction,
such as are found in other parts of Ireland. Even the earliest churches
must have been of stone and it is surprising that more of them have
not survived. We can however form some idea of them from two small
buildings, the little chapel of Doon on the shore at Drumnakill
(Malin Head) and the so-called Saint's Grave or Skull House at Cooley
near Moville.
The former is a small building, ruined on the west, measuring internally
35ft x15¼ft. The quoins are of rough ashlar. The walls are
faced with large stones packed into with chips and apparently without
mortar. There were slit-windows on south and east, with widely splaying
jambs, such as are common in Romanesque architecture in the west.
The east window was about four feet high and probably surmounted
by a round arch; its inner face had a rectangular lintel. Such primitive
chapels are often found in the west of Ireland. They conform to
a very archaic style of building, though some examples may in fact
be of late date, after more advanced fashions had been introduced
to other parts of the country.
The Saint's Grave at Cooley is a small stone-roofed building not
unlike some of the primitive churches found in Leinster. The door
is surmounted by a massive lintel, the roof has a steep pitch.
Extract from "'Twixt Foyle & Swilly"
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