Cave, Lugduff, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Caves & Shelters
A small hollow cut into a cliff face above Glendalough's Upper Lake, roughly nine and a half metres above the waterline, has accumulated more competing explanations than its modest dimensions might suggest.
Known as St Kevin's Bed, it sits in the rock of Lugduff on the southern shore, reachable only by boat or by a precarious traverse along the cliff, and it has resisted easy categorisation for well over a century.
The traditional account is hagiographic: the sixth-century monastic founder St Kevin is said to have used the cave as a sleeping place, retreating into the rock face above the water as part of a life of extreme ascetic withdrawal. That association is old and persistent. But scholars have also proposed it as a Bronze Age burial site, a rock-cut tomb of the kind occasionally found in upland areas where natural outcrops were worked into funerary chambers. A third possibility complicates both readings. The cave may be the opening of a mine, and a second partial opening at a lower level hints that whatever was begun here was not finished, or at least not completed in a form that survives. Leask, writing in 1950, and Barrow, in 1992, both addressed the site without resolving the question, which is itself a measure of how genuinely ambiguous the physical evidence remains.
The Discovery Programme, an Irish archaeological research body, has produced a detailed three-dimensional digital model of the cave, allowing the interior to be examined in a way that the awkward cliff-side position makes difficult in person. For those who do visit Glendalough, the cave is visible from the lake shore, though accessing it directly requires a boat and some care on the rock; its position above the water gives it an undeniable atmosphere, whatever its original purpose.