Skellig Michael and the Ancient Monastery in the Middle of the Ocean
Skellig Michael, which means Michael's rock in Irish language,
also known as Great Skellig, is a steep rocky island in the Atlantic
Ocean 12 km off the coast of south-west Ireland. Perched high at the
summit of a 230-metre-high rock is an ancient monastery probably founded
during the 7th century. For 600 years the island was a centre of
monastic life for Irish Christian monks. The monks lived in stone
'beehive' huts perched above nearly vertical cliff walls totally cut-off
from the rest of the world by vast expanse of water, except for the
occasional Viking invaders who raided the monastery from time to time.
Skellig
Michael is an outstanding example of an early religious settlement
deliberately sited on a pyramidal rock in the ocean, preserved because
of a remarkable environment. The very spartan conditions inside the
monastery illustrate the ascetic lifestyle practiced by early Irish
Christians. Because of the extreme remoteness of Skellig Michael, the
island has until recently discouraged visitors. This kept the site
exceptionally well preserved.
Skellig
Michael was occupied continuously until the later 12th century, when a
general climatic deterioration led to increased storms in the seas
around the island and forced the community to move to the mainland.
However, a monastic presence was maintained and the buildings were kept
in repair until the 16th century. Although monastery no longer existed,
it continued to be a place of pilgrimage. Large numbers of pilgrims came
and performed the way of the Cross from the Landing place up to the
monastery. Skellig Michael also became a place for young couples to
marry during lent, a time when marriage could not take place on the
mainland but was permitted on the island.
Around
1826 the island was passed to the Corporation for Preserving and
Improving the Port of Dublin (later to become the Commissioners of Irish
Lights), who built two lighthouses on the Atlantic side, one of which
is still in use today.
Skellig Michael in its entirety became a World Heritage Site in 1996.
Sea
birds are abundant on Skellig Michael – the Guillemots, Puffins,
Razorbills, Gannets, Fulmar and Kittiwakes. The whole Island turns white
in the summer months from the vast number of birds nesting there.