
St. Mullin's Cross
St. Mullin's Cross.
On the east bank of the River Barrow is St. Mullin"s, a monastery which was founded by St. Moling: a prince, poet, artist and artisan, as well as a priest, who died in 696. He became Bishop of Ferns and was buried at St. Mullin's. The monastery was plundered by the Vikings in 951 and was burned in 1138. An abbey was built on the site later, in the Middle Ages. In an 8th century manuscript, known as "The Book of Mulling" there is a plan of the monastery - the earliest known plan of an Irish monastery, which shows four crosses inside the round monastic wall and eight crosses outside it. The symbol of the shamrock is from a legend about St. Patrick that says he used a shamrock with its three leaves to explain the Trinity, the triple nature of God.
From: Co. Carlow, Ireland
Dimensions: 10" x 5"
Due to the hand casting and proprietary staining process, each of my plaques is unique. Each cross comes with a hanger embedded in the stone. The cross comes with a descriptive tag describing the original stone, explanation of the design or information on where the cross is located.
Handmade products – Images may vary slightly from actual products.