Name:
DUNBRODY Location: Waterford Harbour County:
Wexford Foundation: 1182 Mother house:
Dublin, St. Mary’s Relocation: None Founder: Herve
de Montmorency Dissolution: 1536 Prominent members: Access: Accessible to the public
In 1171-2 Herve de Montmorency (one of the feudal adventurers
who had accompanied Strongbow in the initial invasion of Leinster)
made
a grant of land to the Cistercians of Buildwas
Abbey (Shropshire).
Subsequently a lay-brother was
sent to inspect the site. Upon his arrival, he discovered
a place of vast solitude and was forced to
take up residence in a hollow oak tree. Nothing seems to have come
of the grant until 1182 when Leonard, the abbot of St. Mary’s,
Dublin, went to Buildwas to discuss the matter with Abbot Ranulph.
Ranulph gave Leonard the right to take over Herve’s grant
and a new abbey was founded at Dunbrody in the same year. John
O’Heyne
was sent as the first abbot with twelve monks from St. Mary’s,
and the abbey was confirmed by Pope Lucius III (1181-5). Two or
three decades passed before the monks commenced construction of
the church in stone. The Latin name of the abbey is a reference
to the location combined with a dedicatory formula: ‘Portus
St. Mariae’, the harbour of St. Mary. Dunbrody had a strong
anglophile sentiment and in 1228 one of the brothers attended
Stephen
of Lexington during his visitation of the Irish Cistercian houses.
Dunbrody had a monastic prison on site. In 1390 David Esmond,
a
commissioner of Richard II, sent to investigate extortion in Wexford,
was captured by the monks of Dunbrody and imprisoned for sixteen
days. He was only released when he swore that he would not prosecute
any of them for these proceedings.
In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries Dunbrody’s annual
income was exceedingly low, valued at £28, with a potential
peace-time value of £40. In the later middles ages Dunbrody
was continually exposed to attacks from the Kavanaghs, who made
regular forays in south Wexford, and many of its estates were waste
when the monastery was dissolved in 1536. Although the community
was disbanded, the local priest at Dunbrody continued to use the
title of abbot for many years to come. In 1545 Dunbrody was
granted
to an English soldier, Sir Osborne Etchingham. Monastic land was
often used as bait to encourage English gentry to settle in
Ireland
and so reinforce the authority of the crown. Etchingham converted
the abbey into a Tudor mansion c. 1546-7. In the early years
of
the nineteenth century the ruins at Dunbrody Abbey inspired a number
of poems, expressing a sense of nostalgic sentiment
for the old monastery. In 1852 the south arcade collapsed from
disintegration and decay. The ruins are now conserved for public
display by the state and the abbey houses a craft shop and small
museum, including a scale replica of the mansion built by Etchingham.
There are various activities at the site, including tours of the
abbey, mini-golf, and a full size hedge maze.