Tubrid or Tubbrid (Irish: Tiobraid)[1] is a civil and former ecclesiastical parish situated between the towns of Cahir and Clogheen in County Tipperary, Ireland.
A cluster of architectural remains at the old settlement still known as Tubrid includes an ancient cemetery and two ruined churches of regional historical significance.
[4] It is of particular historical significance as the burial site of many Counter-Reformation ecclesiastics including John Brenan Archbishop of Cashel, Eugene Duhy (O'Duffy) and most notably Geoffrey Keating.
[5] Over the entrance door to the chapel is a Latin inscription which translates into English as :[6][7] On the same site is the considerably larger 19th-century Protestant church, also now roofless and in a deteriorating condition.
[13] Its occupant during the 1641 Rebellion, James Butler, was hanged at Clonmel on 10 May 1653, in retaliation for attacks by his followers on Golden[14] and his household transplanted to Connaught.