Burial ground, Ballybaun, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Burial Grounds
At Ballybaun in County Galway, a slightly raised patch of ground holds the remains of what was once a burial site connected to an early ecclesiastical enclosure.
What makes this particular spot quietly unsettling is not any dramatic ruin or visible monument, but rather what has been pushed to the surface by the site's most industrious current occupants. Badgers, whose setts honeycombing the raised area have caused considerable disturbance over the years, have exposed numerous human bones, making the burial ground legible in a way that no formal excavation has managed.
The burial ground sits within the eastern segment of an ecclesiastical enclosure, a type of roughly circular or oval boundary, often defined by an earthen bank or ditch, that would have demarcated a sacred or monastic precinct in early medieval Ireland. The association between the burials and the enclosure suggests this was a consecrated space serving a religious community or settlement at some point in the early Christian period. The detail about the exposed bones was recorded by Professor E. Rynne in December 1983, passed on as a personal communication to researchers working on the Galway Archaeological Survey based at University College Galway. That the information reached the record through a direct observation rather than a formal dig speaks to how much of Irish archaeological knowledge has been pieced together from site visits, chance finds, and the slow work of badgers.