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Pre
Christian
In very early times, a dense population existed here, as is
manifest from the many large enclosures of clay mounds, called 'Raths'. In or
near these artificial structures bones of human beings and burnt ashes have
frequently been found. Smaller raths still dot the land. These were
predominantly cattle and sheep enclosures.
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One famous pagan shrine, possibly a temple to the sun, stood at
Carnsore Point where a natural stone structure is believed to have been a
Druid's altar. In Penal times this was used as a Mass Rock.
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In a list of Irish place-names published in Iris-Leabhar na
Gaeilge in 1903, the Irish name for Our Lady's Island is given as
Cluain-na-mBan - 'the meadow of the women'. Considering that this locality
was the centre of druidical worship, it would not be far-fetched to suggest that
Our Lady's Island was in pre-Christian times inhabited by female druids.
Early Christian
Given the proximity of Co. Wexford’s coastline to the continent,
there is no doubt that continental merchants trading with Ireland brought the
faith to the shores of Wexford long before St. Patrick.
Tradition has always existed that Our Lady's Island was founded by St Abban,
nephew of St Ibar, in the sixth century and its reputation as a place of
pilgrimage and of devotion to Our Lady was established by or before the year 600
A.D.
Norman Times
Before the time of the Anglo-Norman landings, the Christian faith
was very strong in Co. Wexford. This is evident from the large number of
parishes, each with at least one place of worship and one of burial area bearing
Irish Names.
Following the Norman Invasions of the late 12th
century lands were confiscated and given to the favourites of the Norman
leaders. A number of estates came into the possession of Milo
De Lamporte and it was he who built the old feudal stronghold in 1195.
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It was his son, Rudolph who built another strong hold, the Tower
House, upon the Island in 1237. In front
lies a space of elevated ground called 'Ardownes' or the Highlands, containing
about 180 acres, between two forks of the lake. It is well protected by a
strong, thick earthen mound, that is still, in parts, twelve to fifteen feet
high, and runs for nearly half a mile. |
Rudolph gave this land to the Church and asked the Canons Regular
of St Augustine to take charge of the island. He then went to fight in the
Crusades, where he was killed. Before he left, he asked that prayers be said for
the repose of his soul.
Early Pilgrimages
Historical evidence of the pilgrimage was discovered in 1941, when a member of
the Druhan family, who lived on the Island, unearthed what appeared to be a coin
while ploughing. He brought it to the local curate, Fr Browne, who recognised it
as something more than a coin and sent it to the British Museum for inspection.
It was later confirmed that the metal disk was "a leaden Bula of Pope Martinus V
(1417-1431). Martin V's Bula granted indulgences to pilgrims."

In 1607, Pope Paul V addressed a Brief to the Clergy, Nobility
and Faithful People of the Kingdom of Ireland in which he exhorted them to
imitate the martyrs of their race and so prove themselves worthy sons of their
forefathers who merited for Ireland the title of Island of Saints. He would also
grant indulgences to various towns and cities in which there was a Sodality of
the Annunciata on the feasts of - the Purification, Annunciation and Assumption
and to famous places of devotion and pilgrimage. The list of such places
includes Our Lady’s Island where
a Plenary Indulgence would be granted to all the faithful who after Confession
and Holy Communion would visit the Church of Our Lady's Island on the Feast of
the Nativity of Our Lady (8th September) and on that of the Assumption (15th
August).
Cromwell's Persecution (1649)
In October 1649, Cromwell arrived in Wexford and sent out foraging parties
around the county. One such party arrived in Our Lady's Island, where many
people had gone for sanctuary. The Augustinian priests refused to bear arms
against their country. They were murdered, the church was unroofed and
desecrated and the castle was burned. Mass has not been celebrated within the
walls of the old church since. A young boy rushed into nearby church of St Ibar,
snatched the crucifix from the altar and attempted to escape across the shallow
part of the lake. He was shot, and the crucifix was lost. It lay in the mud and
water until 1887 when it was found in the lake and taken to the parish priest
Today it is preserved in a simple shrine in the parish church with its history
inscribed.
Click on the asterisk
for more complete account.*
A mere twenty years after Cromwell's massacre, pilgrims were flocking to Our
Lady's Island once more.
The Penal Laws
During the Penal Days in the eighteenth century, Pope Benedict XIV suppressed
some of the Irish local pilgrimages because of reported abuses, but he
specifically exempted Lough Derg and Our Lady's Island and in 1833 the island
was still being described as a celebrated place of pilgrimage.
Pilgrimages in the 19th century.
In June 1867, the Redemptorist Fathers conducted a Mission in the
parish. On the last Sunday of the Mission, Dr. Furlong, the Bishop of Ferns
presided at the huge procession of the Blessed Sacrament around the island and
at the High Mass in the new parish church. The island was dedicated to the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
In 1897 the local Parish Priest, Fr Whitty, established the
custom of the public Pilgrimage Procession on 15th August. Since then the
pilgrimage has grown year by year.
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