Burial ground, Forenaght, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
In the scrubland around Forenaght in West Cork, a burial ground for children has been swallowed almost entirely by vegetation.
The site was already significant enough to be named on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842, labelled plainly as a Children's Burial Ground, yet today it is described as indistinguishable due to heavy overgrowth. That gap between official cartographic recognition and present-day invisibility is a quietly unsettling one.
Places like this belong to a practice once widespread across Ireland: the burial of unbaptised infants in unconsecrated ground, in locations set apart from the parish churchyard. These sites are known in Irish as cilliní, and they appear in fields, on hillsides, at boundaries, and beside ancient earthworks throughout the country. Because the Catholic Church historically denied full burial rites to unbaptised children, families interred them instead in liminal spaces, often quietly and without formal record. The 1842 OS mapping caught this one by name, which suggests it was well enough known locally at the time to warrant inclusion, even if its precise physical extent was never formally documented. By the time modern surveys came to look at it, the land had moved on without it.