Graveyard, Meadstown, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
A graveyard that is simultaneously overgrown and still in active use has a particular quality of layering that tidier burial grounds rarely achieve.
The one at Meadstown, on the south side of a rural road in County Cork, sits within a stone-walled rectangle of roughly thirty-five metres east to west and forty-five metres north to south, vegetation pressing in from all sides around headstones that continue to receive the newly dead. The oldest marked grave recorded here dates from 1796, though the ground almost certainly held burials long before anyone thought to cut a date into stone.
What anchors the site historically is the presence of the ruins of Liscleary parish church, which stand just to the south of the graveyard's centre. Parish churches of this type in Cork often trace their origins to the medieval period, and their graveyards frequently continued in use long after the church building itself fell out of service and into ruin. The relationship between the two elements here follows that pattern: the church fabric has collapsed or been reduced to rubble, but the ground around it retained its sacred and communal function, gathering the dead of successive generations while the walls that once defined the religious focus of the place crumbled quietly beside them.
