Fuerty

Fuerty
Fiodharta
Town
Fuerty church and graveyard
Fuerty
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 53°37′00″N 8°16′00″W / 53.6166°N 8.2666°W / 53.6166; -8.2666Coordinates: 53°37′00″N 8°16′00″W / 53.6166°N 8.2666°W / 53.6166; -8.2666
Country Ireland
Province Connacht
County County Roscommon
Elevation 75 m (246 ft)
Time zone UTC+0 (WET)
  Summer (DST) UTC-1 (IST (WEST))
Irish Grid Reference M834574

Fuerty (historically Fewerty, from Irish: Fiodharta, meaning "high wood")[1] is a hamlet on the R366 regional road near the town of Roscommon in County Roscommon, Ireland. The place is known for a ruined church and ancient graveyard on the site of a Celtic Christian abbey.

The church and graveyard

It is said that Saint Patrick visited Fuerty and left a deacon to found a monastic settlement here. The deacon, Justus, baptised Saint Ciarán, a local man, around the year 500. Ciaran went on to found Clonmacnoise, which became one of the most important monasteries and centres of learning in Europe.

Two 8th century granite grave slabs in the west side of the tower bear inscriptions that can still be read. One of them bears the name of Ardeachan, Abbot of Clonmacnoise. The abbey was attacked and destroyed by the English Elizabethan invaders and all its monks were slain. The existing ruins are of a 17th-century Church of Ireland. The tower was added in 1790 but the church was destroyed by fire in 1870.

Cromwellian barbarity

Cromwellian troops under the leadership of Ormsby killed more than one hundred elderly clergy at Fuerty abbey.[2]

References

  1. Placenames Database of Ireland (see archival records)
  2. Skeffington

See also

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