Burial ground, Bealad, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
On a south-facing slope in the West Cork townland of Bealad, a rough parcel of land sits quietly in pasture, its purpose announced not by any signpost or marker but by local memory alone.
The site is known in the surrounding area simply as a burial ground, an informal designation that carries more weight than it might first appear, since many such places in rural Ireland were used for centuries outside the formal structures of parish churches, often for unbaptised children, strangers, or those who died before the arrival of Christianity.
The ground covers an irregular area of roughly 70 metres east to west and about 20 metres north to south, partially enclosed by stone-walling that has clearly seen better days. The interior is heavily overgrown and scattered with loose boulders, giving the site the kind of ambiguity that makes it difficult to read from the surface. Whether those boulders are the remnants of some earlier structural arrangement, or simply the slow accumulation of cleared field stone, is not recorded. What is recorded is the local name, and in West Cork that kind of persistent oral tradition tends to be worth taking seriously.