Burial ground, Knockalisheen, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Burial Grounds
At Knockalisheen, a townland in County Clare, there is a burial ground that has been formally recorded as an archaeological monument yet remains largely undocumented in any publicly accessible form.
It sits in that particular category of Irish heritage site that is known to exist, is considered significant enough to be listed, and yet yields almost nothing to the curious enquirer. The name Knockalisheen derives from the Irish, most likely containing the element cnoc, meaning hill, though the precise etymology varies by local tradition. That a burial ground should occupy such a place is unremarkable in itself; early Christian and pre-Christian communities across Ireland regularly chose elevated or liminal ground for interment. What is quietly strange here is the near-total silence surrounding it.
Ireland holds thousands of recorded burial grounds, ranging from prehistoric cist graves and early medieval enclosures to post-medieval parish cemeteries. Many were established in the early Christian period, when the practice of burying the dead near a church or holy site became widespread, and some were used continuously across many centuries before being abandoned. Without further detail it is not possible to say where Knockalisheen falls on that long continuum, which period it belongs to, or how much of it survives above ground. That uncertainty is itself part of its character. Clare is a county densely layered with such sites, many of which passed out of active use long before anyone thought to write them down with any care.