Kilfane Church

Church in County Kilkenny, Ireland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kilfane Churchmap

Kilfane Church is a medieval church and National Monument in County Kilkenny, Ireland.[2]

Quick Facts Location, Country ...
Kilfane Church
Cell-Phaain[1]
Cill Pháin
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Kilfane Church
52.554167°N 7.118333°W / 52.554167; -7.118333
LocationKilfane Demesne, Kilfane, County Kilkenny
CountryIreland
DenominationChurch of Ireland
Previous denominationPre-Reformation Catholic
History
Founder(s)Cantwell family
Architecture
Functional statusinactive
Heritage designation
Official nameKilfane Church
Reference no.300
StyleLate Gothic
Years built13th century
Specifications
Length22 m (72 ft)
Width7 m (23 ft)
Materialsstone
Administration
DioceseOssory
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Location

Kilfane Church is located, in Kilfane, approximately 3.4 km (2.1 mi) north-northeast of Thomastown, County Kilkenny.[3]

History

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The Cantwell Fada

The area is supposed to derive its name from a Saint Phian.

The church was built in the 13th century. The Cantwells were Lords of Kilfane and adjoining areas from shortly after the Norman conquest to the confiscations following the Confederation.[4]

Poet Deirdre Brennan wrote a poem about Kilfane Church in 2001.[5]

Church

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Ogee doorway

Kilfane Church is a long rectangle with sedilia, altar, book rest and piscina. The sedilia are believed to come from an older church and still have some medieval paint. Three original doorways in the north and south walls are headed by ogee stones.

The castellated tower house at the east end may have housed the presbytery/sacristy and provided residents in the upper storeys.[6]

When the new Church of Ireland building was built across the road, the old church found new use as a schoolhouse.[7]

The main feature is the Cantwell Fada, an effigy of a knight from the 1320s/30s;[8] this would have been intended to lie horizontally as a cover to his tomb, but is now set vertically [9][10] and protected by a transparent cover. When the church was used as a school, misbehaving children were made to kiss the effigy. Later, it had been covered by soil to protect it until 1840, when James Graves uncovered and cleaned it.[7]

Four casts were made;[7] one of them is on display in the National Museum in Dublin.

References

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