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St. Peter's Church, Ennisnag, Kilkenny

Coordinates: 52°32′42″N 7°13′37″W / 52.54500°N 7.22694°W / 52.54500; -7.22694
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saint Peters Church, Ennisnag
St. Peter's Church Ennisnag at sunrise in 2018
St. Peter's Church Ennisnag at sunrise in 2018
Saint Peters Church, Ennisnag is located in Ireland
Saint Peters Church, Ennisnag
Saint Peters Church, Ennisnag
52°32′42″N 7°13′37″W / 52.54500°N 7.22694°W / 52.54500; -7.22694
OS grid referenceS 52048 44949
LocationEnnisnag, County Kilkenny
CountryIreland
DenominationChurch of Ireland
Previous denominationRoman Catholic
Websitekellsgroupofparishes.wordpress.com
History
DedicationManchán of Mohill
Architecture
Completed1815
Administration
ProvinceProvince of Dublin
DioceseDiocese of Cashel and Ossory
ParishKells with St Mary
Clergy
ArchbishopMichael Jackson
Bishop(s)Bishop of Cashel and Ossory
Priest in chargeRevd James Mulhall

Saint Peter's Church, Ennisnag (Middle English: Inisnag and Irish: Inis Snaig meaning "the Island or Islet of the Crane or Heron") is a church of the United Dioceses of Cashel and Ossory and the ecclesiastical province of the United Provinces of Dublin and Cashel in the (Anglican) Church of Ireland.[1] The church lies beside the Kings River, one mile north of Stoneyford village in County Kilkenny, Ireland. Located in the townland of Ennisnag, in the barony of Shillelogher.[2]

The 19th century church was constructed on an old medieval monastery and church no longer extant. Probably the most distinguished rector and resident of Ennisnag was the famous Irish antiquarian, James Graves, who died in 1886. In the graveyard, Catholic burials to the rear and the Church of Ireland burials to the front.[3] Among those buried there is Hubert Butler, the Anglo-Irish essayist.[4]

History

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The Monastery of Ennisnag was an early Irish Christian monastery, and later a medieval prebendal church, located at Ennisnag, in County Kilkenny, Ireland. Little is known about the monastic community here. Canon William Carrigan suggested "an ancient Church stood on the site from time immemorial to after the Cromwellian era".[3] John O'Hanlon reported that Diocese of Ossory ecclesiastical records names Saint Manchan as patron saint writing "at Inisnag, diocese of Ossory, St. Manchan, whose feast occurs on the 14th of February, was venerated as a patron (Statuta Dioecesis Ossoriensis)".[5] So it was probably founded by Manchán of Mohill in the 5th or 6th century.[5][6] The monastery of Inis-Snaig was probably small in scale. The church of Inisnag was recorded as prebendal of Ossory diocese, in the Taxatio Ecclesiastica of AD 1291–1292, and was granted on "the authority of Pope Nicholas IV, 1291 [liber ruber Ossoriensis]".[3] The medieval church fell into ruins after the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and upheavals of 17th century Ireland. The medieval monastery and church are no longer extant. From the ruins, St Peter's church, of Protestant denomination, was established in the early 19th century.

Architecture

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Saint Peter's Church is a protected structure.[7][8][9] The Board of First Fruits Church of Ireland built the church 1815[7] under the architect William Robertson.[10] The church contains a detached three-bay double-height over part-basement single-cell.[7]

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Kells St Mary, Diocese of Cashel, Ferns & Ossory". anglican.org. Church of Ireland. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
  2. ^ Fiontar 2008, Inis Snag/Ennisnag
  3. ^ a b c d Sheridan & Kirwan 2011.
  4. ^ O’Reilly 2015, p. 55
  5. ^ a b c O'Hanlon 1875, pp. 522, 524.
  6. ^ One source claims "The patron saint of Ennisnag was St Mogue-Moling,"Mo'Aod Og" .. his feast day was celebrated here on the 14h of February",[3] but Máedócs feast day is 29 January. Manchan, patron of Inisnag, feast day is 14 February.[5]
  7. ^ a b c Kilkenny County Council & Heritage Office 2014, p. 29, RPS REF C300
  8. ^ NIAH, NIAH REF 12316006
  9. ^ RMP, SMR No. KK027-020001-
  10. ^ Lucey 2018, p. 162

Sources

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  • Lucey, John (2018). "William Robertson (1770-1850), Kilkenny's First Architect". Old Kilkenny Review. Journal of the Kilkenny Archaeological Society. Kilkenny: 162.
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