Graveyard, Kilbroney, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
What gives this small graveyard near the Awbeg River its quietly unsettling quality is not what is visible but what may have disappeared.
A scarped edge, running an uneven line roughly twenty metres beyond the present boundary on three sides, suggests the enclosure once covered a considerably larger area. Whatever lay in those outer reaches, whether graves, structures, or simply hallowed ground, has long since been absorbed into the surrounding pasture.
The site sits atop a low ridge in farmland, the Awbeg running to the east below. A rectangular enclosure, roughly twenty-four metres by thirty-two, is defined by an eroded bank of earth and stone, its maximum height now less than a metre. Entry is through a gap at the northern end of the eastern side. Within the enclosure stands the ruin of the parish church of Kilbroney, and it is here that the most legible piece of the site's history survives: a chest tomb, the raised box-like monument common to eighteenth-century Irish burial practice, belonging to the Freeman family and dated 1741. Elsewhere, the gravemarkers are low and uninscribed, their identities long lost. The church is no longer in use, and no active burials take place here.
The landscape is quiet and pastoral, and the site requires some attentiveness to read properly. The bank enclosing the graveyard is worn enough to be easy to miss, and the scarped ground beyond the boundary is subtle rather than dramatic. It is worth walking the perimeter slowly, looking outward as much as inward, to get a sense of how much the visible enclosure may underrepresent the original extent of the place.