Grave Yard, Tankardstown, Co. Laois
Co. Laois |
Burial Grounds
What makes this graveyard in Tankardstown unusual is not the ruin at its centre, nor even the two seventeenth-century headstones quietly weathering in its eastern quadrant, but the logic of everything around it.
Within roughly half a kilometre, a medieval church, two castle sites, and a holy well cluster together on the western bank of the River Barrow in a configuration that says less about piety and more about strategic necessity.
The church ruin sits at the centre of a rectangular walled graveyard measuring roughly 30 metres north to south and 47 metres east to west. Writing in 1907, the historians O'Hanlon and O'Leary noted that both castle sites in the area, one about 165 metres to the north-north-west of the graveyard and another approximately 500 metres to the south, appear to have been positioned deliberately to command a crossing point over the Barrow. The river was a significant boundary in this part of Laois, which was then known as Queen's County, and controlling passage across it would have mattered enormously during the period of Anglo-Norman settlement and the turbulent centuries that followed. The church itself appears on Sir William Petty's seventeenth-century maps of the parish, already in a landscape that had clearly accumulated layers of use, defence, and devotion over a long period. St Thomas's Well, roughly 90 metres to the north, adds a further thread; holy wells in Ireland were often ancient gathering points, pre-dating and outlasting the ecclesiastical structures that later grew up beside them.
An oblique aerial photograph taken in July 1970 shows the outline of the church and graveyard with notable clarity from above, the stone enclosure sitting close to the riverbank in gently rolling countryside. The two seventeenth-century headstones in the eastern part of the graveyard are among the more legible survivals on the ground, set apart from the older medieval fabric of the church itself.
