Fore Abbey Westmeath
Fore Abbey in County Westmeath is one of the most atmospheric and most completely preserved medieval monastic sites in the Irish Midlands, a Benedictine priory of the thirteenth century set in a wooded valley below the Fore Hills whose combination of the substantial surviving church, chapter house and anchorite's cell, the tranquil lakeside setting and the extraordinary series of seven wonders associated with the site creates one of the most rewarding monastic heritage visits in the midland counties. The Seven Wonders of Fore are a medieval tradition of improbable natural or miraculous features associated with the monastery.
The monastery was founded as a Benedictine house in the thirteenth century on the site of an early Christian church traditionally attributed to St Feichin in the seventh century, and the current buildings represent the principal period of Benedictine occupation from the thirteenth to the sixteenth centuries. The church, the chapter house, the cloister foundations and the refectory are all identifiable in the substantial ruins that survive above the valley floor in unusually good condition for a midland Irish monastery.
The Seven Wonders of Fore, which include water that won't boil, a mill without a millrace and a tree that won't burn, reflect the medieval tradition of associating monastic sites with miraculous phenomena that demonstrated divine favour. The anchorite's cell in the tower above the valley, where the last occupant is said to have been walled in voluntarily, provides the most dramatically human connection to the monastic tradition of this unusual and rewarding site.