Burial, Dunowen, Co. Cork
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Burial Sites
Beneath the ruins of Dunowen Castle on the West Cork coast, a single stone slab once concealed a decayed human skeleton.
No grave goods, no inscription, no obvious explanation for why a person came to be buried there, beneath a flagstone, within the fabric of a castle structure. It is the kind of discovery that raises more questions than it answers, and the historical record offers little beyond the bare fact of the find itself.
The detail comes from T. J. Westropp, writing in 1914, who recorded the skeleton's discovery at Dunowen Castle. Westropp was a prolific documenter of Irish monuments in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, and his field observations remain a primary source for sites that have since deteriorated or disappeared entirely. Whether the burial predated the castle, was contemporary with its occupation, or represents something later and more difficult to categorise is not recorded. A skeleton found under a slab within or immediately beside a castle could point to any number of circumstances, from a hastily covered wartime death to a deliberate interment outside consecrated ground. The castle itself stands on the Dunowen headland, and the burial is noted simply as an associated find, modest in description but quietly unsettling in implication.