Puneet Varma (Editor)

Kilcroney Church

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Country
  
Ireland

Dedication
  
Saint Cróine

Floor area
  
95 m²

Founded
  
11th century

Style
  
Celtic Christianity

Materials
  
Sandstone, Granite, Slate

Kilcroney Church

Location
  
Kilcroney, Kilmacanogue, County Wicklow

Denomination
  
Pre-Reformation Catholic

Diocese
  
Anglican Diocese of Dublin and Glendalough

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

Contents

Location

Kilcroney Church is located in woodland on the western edge of Bray, to the south of the River Dargle.

History

There may have been an earlier wooden church on the site, dedicated to Saint Cróine, an obscure female saint of the 5th century.

The stone church was built in the 11th century, and the pre-Norman patrons were either the Uí Briuin Cualann or the Ó Ceallaigh of Uí Teigh. In the Norman period, Kilcroney is mentioned in records of 1280, 1285 and 1305. It later returned to Gaelic Irish possession when the Ó Tuathail (O'Tooles) took over the area.

In 1533, it was mentioned that Kilcroney was a chapel of the larger local church at Stagonyll (Powerscourt). Other records claim it was a possession of St. Mary's Abbey, Dublin.

The church was extended in the late medieval period, and in the modern period there has been some restoration, with the walls being propped up.

Church

The church is rectangular in shapewith walls of sandstone, granite and shale blocks. The southern wall holds a granite lintel and round-headed window.

References

Kilcroney Church Wikipedia