Dolmens Are a Girls Best Friend

'The Jumping Church' : Church

TownlandKilmedock
CountyLouth
Grid RefM 974 884
GPSM 97449 88369 (10m)
Longitude8° 2' 19.54" W
Latitude53° 50' 41.15" N
Nearest TownRoosky (7.5 Km)
OS Sheet33
UTM zone29U
UTM x563242.04919728
UTM y5966678.4861633
Hide map  (N.B. Google Maps & GPS readings are slightly out of sync - position is approximate)
Show inline map (by Google Maps)

Visit Notes

Sunday, 14th November 2004

I was happily driving home at dusk when I saw the sign pointing to "The Jumping Church", a place I'd read about quite some time ago, but had no real idea about where it was. By the time I could react I'd passed the junction but decided to turn around and go and take a look.

The church gets its name from the west gable wall, which seems to have 'jumped' off its foundations and now stands, albeit leaning, inside the nave. Local lore says the wall jumped so that the body of an excommunicated person was no longer buried within the building. This tale probably owes something to the fact that there is the grave of a murderer who was hung, drawn and quartered in the graveyard. Apparently a storm in 1715 was actually responsible for moving the wall.

There are a few fragments of carved masonry on the low remains of the east wall and a small bullaun stone with a single bullaun cemented onto the north wall.

Whilst I was there I got talking to the man that looks after the graveyard who very keenly told me lots of tales and sold me a nice little booklet about the church for two euro. One of these tales was about a hill to the east that is said to contain a chieftain and his army who sleep within it. It is said that when a red-haired boy with two thumbs on his left hand draws a magical sword from its scabbard they will awake and free Ireland. Some versions of the story say that the boy has already been born and did pull the sword from the scabbard, but when the hill opened and he saw the army within he panicked and replaced the blade, and the soldiers went back to sleep. Hence Ireland can now never be free. (I think this last version may have been started by the British!)

Click Thumbnail to View Full Size Image

Click To View Large Image_Click To View Large Image_Click To View Large Image_Click To View Large Image_Click To View Large Image_

All Sites Visited On 14th November 2004    « Previous Site

Have you visited This Monument?

If so, give it a rating for others to see
Your Name
Where are you from?
Rating

A Selection of Other Churches

Click To View Large Image
Kilteel
(Co. Kildare)
Click To View Large Image
Ashtown
(Co. Wicklow)
Click To View Large Image
Rahan
(Co. Offaly)
Click To View Large Image
Noughaval
(Co. Clare)
Click To View Large Image
St. Mary's Priory
(Co. Louth)
Click To View Large Image
Skirk
(Co. Laois)

Show All 88 Churches Featured on megalithomania.com

AddThis Social Bookmark Button Valid CSS Valid HTML
Top of page | Feedback | About this site
© Copyright Tom FourWinds 2001-2008