Graveyard, Friaryland, Co. Meath
Co. Meath |
Burial Grounds
A graveyard that has surrendered almost all of its dead to time is an unsettling thing, and the one associated with the church of Mary Magdalene at Friaryland, in Co. Meath, is a particularly quiet example.
The entire burial ground, enclosed within masonry walls and roughly triangular in shape, stretches about eighty metres along its long axis and forty metres across, tapering to a point at its eastern end. Of whatever headstones once marked the graves here, only two have survived, and both have been removed to the church itself for safekeeping.
The site sits on the eastern end of a low ridge, with the River Boyne running roughly eighty-five metres to the north-east. That proximity to the Boyne places it in one of the most densely layered archaeological landscapes in Ireland, a stretch of river valley that has accumulated monuments, settlements, and ecclesiastical foundations across several millennia. The dedication to Mary Magdalene hints at a medieval or early post-medieval church foundation, and one of the two surviving headstones carries an incised date of 1770, suggesting the graveyard was still in use well into the eighteenth century. Archaeological testing carried out about two hundred metres to the south-south-east found no material connected to the site, leaving its earlier history largely unresolved. The name Friaryland points to a religious community of some kind in the area, though the exact nature and period of that connection remain unclear.