Burial ground, Kilcomane, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
On the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842, a small patch of ground near Kilcomane in West Cork is labelled with unusual specificity: 'Burial Ground for Children'.
That designation points to what was almost certainly a cillín, an informal, unconsecrated burial place used historically for unbaptised infants and others excluded from churchyard burial under Catholic canon law. Such sites are scattered across Ireland, often unremarkable in appearance, often forgotten, and this one is no exception. Today it survives in scrub, its boundaries defined less by walls or fencing than by the irregular shape of the encroaching overgrowth itself.
Grave markers are still noted within the site, and on its western side stands a cross slab, a flat stone incised or carved with a cross, a type of early medieval grave marker found widely across Munster and the west of Ireland. The presence of such a slab hints that the site's origins may predate the post-Famine period with which cilliní are most commonly associated. A local study by O'Donoghue, published in 1986, raises the possibility that church ruins also lie within or close to the burial ground, suggesting an earlier ecclesiastical layer beneath what later became a children's graveyard. No visible surface trace of any such structure has been identified, and the scrub and overgrowth that now define the site make detailed survey difficult.