Burial, Ceathrú An Teampaill, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Burial Sites
On the southern end of Inis Meáin, the middle of the three Aran Islands, a small grassed-over mound sits quietly in a field beside a track-way.
It is modest to the point of near-invisibility: three metres long, just over a metre wide, and barely a third of a metre high, with three small limestone uprights breaking through the turf. Yet local knowledge, as passed on by cartographer and writer Tim Robinson, identifies it plainly as a grave.
The mound is aligned roughly NNE-WSW and is stony beneath its grass covering, suggesting a deliberate construction rather than a natural feature of the karst landscape. A small separate cairn, a low heap of stones of the kind sometimes associated with commemorative or votive practice, sits approximately five metres to the north-east, grass-covered like the mound itself. Neither feature has been formally excavated, so the date and precise nature of the burial remain uncertain. What is clear is that the spot sits within the townland of Ceathrú An Teampaill, a name that translates roughly as the quarter of the church, hinting at a broader sacred or ecclesiastical geography in this part of the island that has not been fully unpicked.