A carved "Trinity Stone," depicting the Trinity, is one of only a few surviving and was sculpted by Rory O'Tunny c. 1520. It was rediscovered in 1974. A chapel was added in 1530.[5]
The chancel continued as a Church of Ireland (Anglican) place of worship until the 1970s.
Church
The church is a nave and chancel with north and south aisles, which have four-arch arcades. The chancel and choir are roofed, and inside the choir is a square baptismal font.
There are tomb-chests in the church but no effigies: one depicts a skeleton and another vaulting and tracery.
The north doorway depicts a carved head of a woman wearing a distinctive horned headdress of the Tudor era.[6][7][8][9][10]