Burial ground, Lackenafasoge, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
On a south-facing pasture slope in Lackenafasoge, a burial ground has been quietly erased.
The stones that once marked it have been shunted to the inner northern bank of the large circular enclosure that surrounds it, dumped there rather than removed entirely, as if clearing the ground was more pressing than any thought of what might be lost. The levelling appears deliberate, and the result is a site where the archaeology now survives mainly as displaced material rather than anything still standing in place.
What makes the site legible, at least in part, is the Ordnance Survey record. On the six-inch map produced in 1842, the burial ground is shown as a circular area positioned at the centre of the larger enclosure, a neat, almost diagrammatic arrangement suggesting two concentric features, one containing the other. By the time the revised six-inch map was drawn in 1902, something had already shifted: the burial ground is recorded not at the centre but in the southern half of the enclosure. Whether this reflects actual disturbance between those two surveys, a correction to an earlier cartographic approximation, or simple inconsistency in recording is not clear. What the two maps together do confirm is that the enclosure itself remained visible across that sixty-year span, and that the burial ground within it was already being read differently by those tasked with mapping it.
Circular enclosures of this kind are a recurring feature in the Irish landscape, often the remains of ringforts or ecclesiastical enclosures, their rounded boundaries sometimes the only outward sign of a long history of use. At Lackenafasoge, the enclosure survives as the more durable element; the burial ground it once contained is now identifiable largely by its absence, and by the stones banked along the northern edge that mark where things ended up rather than where they began.