Grave Yard, Carrowbeg, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Burial Grounds
Carrowbeg is a townland in County Mayo, and somewhere within it lies a graveyard old enough to have been formally recorded as an archaeological monument, yet quiet enough that almost nothing about it has filtered into the public record.
That combination, an officially recognised burial ground with scarcely a word attached to its name, is itself a kind of curiosity. Rural Irish graveyards of this type often mark the sites of early medieval or post-medieval communities, sometimes clustered around a long-vanished church or a holy well, sometimes simply reflecting the habit of burying the dead in ground that had always been used for that purpose, generation after generation, without any single founding moment that history chose to write down.
The townland name Carrowbeg derives from the Irish An Ceathrú Bheag, meaning the small quarter, a reference to the old Gaelic land division system in which a quarter, or ceathrú, represented a standard unit of agricultural territory. Graveyards attached to such townlands frequently predate any formal parish organisation, and may have served dispersed farming communities whose lives and deaths left little trace beyond the stones themselves. Without further detail it is impossible to say whether this particular site contains legible inscriptions, enclosing walls, or any visible structural remains, and inventing such details would do the place no service.