Burial ground, Skenakilla, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
In the north-west corner of a field in Skenakilla, North Cork, there is a place that has effectively disappeared.
No wall breaks the surface, no carved stone catches the light, no obvious depression in the ground signals that anything lies beneath. What survives is knowledge, passed down locally, that a church and burial ground once occupied this spot, and that low, flat stones once marked the graves there. Now even those are gone, or at least no longer visible.
Sites like this one are more common than might be expected across rural Ireland. A church and its associated burial ground often formed the nucleus of early Christian communities, and many such enclosures quietly fell out of use over the centuries, their stones robbed for field walls or simply swallowed by grass and earth. The low stones mentioned in local accounts are characteristic of older Irish burial practice, where modest, unmarked or lightly incised slabs were laid flat over graves rather than set upright in the manner familiar from later churchyards. That local memory has preserved the identity of this particular corner of a particular field is itself significant; oral tradition has carried forward what the ground no longer shows.