Clare County Library | Clare
History |
Ordnance Survey Letters by John O'Donovan and Eugene Curry, 1839 |
Parish of Doora (a) |
The Parish of Doora, lying between the River Fergus and the Parishes of Kilraghtis and Clooney, is called in Irish, Dúiré, a name which is not easily explained unless it be derived from dúr, water, but this is not likely, though fully borne out by the locality, especially at this season of the year for the Church so called is now nearly inaccessible in consequence of the constant rains and its contiguity to the River Fergus which often inundates the place. The Patron Saint of this Church is Durán, whose name rhymes to that of his Church, as Seanan does to Shannon. I am far however, from coming to the conclusion that Duran is a mere fabricated name from Dúr, Water, as Ledwich would make us believe Senan was of Shannon. This Saint’s memory was annually celebrated in this Parish on the 3rd of November, and there is a Holy Well called after him lying about a quarter of a mile to the east of his Church, at which (well) Stations are still performed and in which children are dipped when small-pox or measles is raging in the neighbourhood to answer the same purpose as vaccination, or that they may take them but lightly. The old Church of Dúiré is situated in the middle of a bog, about
one mile to the south east of the Abbey of Ennis. It is a Church of considerable
antiquity and was remodelled at an early period. It measures on the inside fifty
nine feet in length and twenty three feet eight inches in breadth. The west gable,
which was not of the original work, is all destroyed with the exception of two
fragments attached to the two walls; the fragment at the south west corner six
feet in length and about seventeen feet in height, and that at the north west
corner three feet in length and of the same height with the north wall. At the distance of thirteen feet seven inches to the east of this doorway there is in the same wall a very ancient window, round-headed inside and outside. On the inside it is five feet three inches from the present level of the ground, eight feet high and five feet in width, and on the outside four feet in height and in breadth (width) five inches at top and seven and a half inches at the bottom. At the distance of eleven feet eight inches to the east of this window there is another nearly of the same shape, but not so ancient, it having been evidently inserted to match the former when the Church was remodelled. It is placed at the height of five feet from the present level of the ground on the inside, and measures on the inside seven feet seven inches in height and four feet six inches in breadth (width) and on the outside three feet eight inches in height, and in width four and a half inches at top and five and a half inches at the bottom. The former of these windows has a channel and rope (rabbit) on the outside and a representation of the head and breast of a very large dog (evidently the Irish wolf dog) placed at the height of one foot over it; the latter window has not the channel (architrave) or rope (cable moulding) and the only ornament it exhibits is a semicircle raised on the stone which forms its top. Window detail, Doora Church The former is constructed of grit stones beautifully chiselled and the latter of grit and lime stone mixed. Within two feet six inches of the south east corner there is in the east gable a pointed recess (like a doorway) measuring six feet one inch in height and two feet five inches in breadth and extending about half the thickness of the wall. This was certainly constructed when the Church was remodelled. Besides this, the east gable contains two windows which were once very beautiful but now much effaced. They are round-headed inside and outside, and constructed of beautifully chiselled grit. The southern one measures on the inside nine feet six inches in height and six feet in width, but it is disfigured on the outside except at the top, where the stone in which the top of the little arch is formed remains untouched. From this it appears that the width at top was (is) four and a half inches; it was probably six or seven inches at bottom, but it cannot now be ascertained with much certainty. The northern window in this gable is of the same height and breadth with the other, but it certainly is not so old. Like the other, it is destroyed on the outside except the top stone in which its round head is formed. This stone is lime, but the head of the other is grit. The former has the channel and rope (rabbit) on the outside, the latter has the rope but the channel not so deep. The north wall contains a semi-Cyclopean doorway placed eleven feet from the east gable and measuring on the outside five feet six inches from the present level of the field and in width two feet four inches at top and two feet five inches at bottom. Its lintel is three feet nine inches long, seven inches thick, and extends the entire thickness of the wall. This doorway led into an Iardom, the site of which is still faintly traceable. It resembles the southern doorway on the Cathedral of Glendalough which led into a similar lateral (Iardom) building. There were two buttresses placed at the north west and south west corners, but they are nearly destroyed; they were manifestly built when the Church was remodelled. The parts of this Church, which are ancient:- That part of the north wall extending forty two feet in length is of the original work to the height of twelve feet; the remaining four feet of its height is modern. All the east gable was certainly rebuilt. It is my opinion that this gable originally contained but one window, and this the more southern one above described, which was first placed in the middle of the gable, but when the Church was remodelled it was removed some feet out of its original position, and this northern one placed alongside it, and constructed, as well as the taste of the times would allow, to match it. The artizans, however betray their want of taste or skill in making the fac simile. All the south wall was rebuilt except fourteen feet in the middle to the height of twelve feet. The more western window in this wall above described was taken out of its place and removed a few feet further to the north when the wall was remodelled. The more eastern one was put in to match it, but betrays its authenticity (age). The south wall had evidently but one window originally. The more northern window in the south wall of this Church is obviously of the same age with the more southern one in the east gable, and the more eastern window in the south wall is of the same age with the more northern one in the east gable. This Church is locally called Teampull Dúrain, i.e., Ecclesia Sancti Durani. |