Burial ground, Tiduff, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Burial Grounds
In the bracken and undergrowth of Tiduff, in County Kerry, lie the scattered remnants of what local children once identified as a graveyard, including two carefully shaped discs of sandstone, each roughly two feet across, whose purpose remains unexplained.
The stones were not found in any orderly arrangement. Several large sandstone slabs were observed lying about as though tossed aside without ceremony, while the two circular pieces, chipped into shape by someone's deliberate effort, turned up over a nearby fence.
The discovery was made by a visiting party from the County Kerry Field Club, whose Minute Book records the encounter in some detail. The group had no particular reason to investigate the spot until local boys mentioned that the area was reputed, in the neighbourhood, to be an old burial ground. That reputation alone prompted a closer look, and what they found gave the rumour at least partial credibility. The circular sandstone slabs are the more curious element; shaped stones of this kind occasionally appear in early Irish ecclesiastical or burial contexts, though nothing in the account identifies their precise age or function. The slabs scattered through the undergrowth suggest the site had already been disturbed before the Field Club arrived, and no formal excavation appears to have followed.