Tea Lane Graveyard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Established7th century AD
Location
CountryIreland
Coordinates53°20′20″N 6°32′48″W / 53.338772°N 6.546788°W / 53.338772; -6.546788
Tea Lane Graveyard
Conolly chapel
Details
Established7th century AD
Location
CountryIreland
Coordinates53°20′20″N 6°32′48″W / 53.338772°N 6.546788°W / 53.338772; -6.546788
TypeChristian
StyleRural cemetery
Owned byGlasnevin Trust
Size3,140 m2 (0.775 acre)
No. of graves19,400
Websitetealanegraveyard.com
Find a GraveTea Lane Graveyard

Tea Lane Graveyard (Irish: Reilig Lána an Tae) is a Christian cemetery located in Celbridge, Ireland.[1][2][3][4]

The site is located 500 m northwest of the River Liffey and is the reputed burial site of Saint Mochua of Timahoe (died 657). Mochua built a wooden church on the site and was the first abbot of Clondalkin. It stood on the Slighe Mhor, an ancient roadway which ran from Dublin to Galway.[5]

The Normans handed over control of St Mochua's church to the Abbey Church of Saint Thomas the Martyr, Dublin in 1215; the abbey supplied Celbridge with its priests. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the abbey was suppressed and came into the possession of the Anglican Church of Ireland.[6]

The present church building was built c. 1860, incorporating material from the medieval church (c. 1600).[7]

The placename dates to the 19th century, when many English workers were brought over to work at Celbridge mill; the locals noted the large amounts of tea they drank, and the tealeaves that they threw into the roadway,[8] and Church Lane was nicknamed "Tea Lane."[9]

Notable burials

References

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