Graveyard, Templebodan, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
A graveyard without a church is a common enough sight in rural Ireland, but Templebodan carries a particular kind of absence.
The parish church that once gave this place its name had already fallen into ruin by the 1600s, and today not a single stone of it breaks the surface. The burial ground persists, quietly in use, while the building that originally justified its existence has vanished so completely that the 1936 Ordnance Survey map could only manage the designation "site of".
The graveyard itself is trapezoidal in shape, roughly 50 metres east to west and 45 metres north to south, and sits on the eastern side of the road. A cluster of headstones at the eastern end includes the earliest dateable marker, recorded as 1729. The place-name Templebodan contains the Irish word teampall, meaning church, which confirms that a religious structure was once the reason this ground was consecrated at all. By the time Brady documented it in 1863, citing the building as ruinous since the seventeenth century, the church had already been gone for two hundred years. What remained was the habit of burial, continued by local families across the intervening centuries, lending the site a quietly layered quality: the living carrying on a practice whose original architecture has dissolved entirely back into the earth.