Burial ground, Dromore By.), Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
On a south-facing slope in West Cork, a small irregular enclosure sits quietly in pasture, its low earthen bank marking the boundary of a burial ground that has been in use long enough to accumulate many grave markers within a modest footprint of roughly thirty metres by twenty.
The site is contained rather than sprawling, and that compression gives it an unusually concentrated atmosphere, the dead gathered together on a gentle hillside in a space not much larger than a tennis court.
The burial ground at Dromore was already considered significant enough to be recorded on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842, which named it explicitly, suggesting it was a well-known local landmark even at that point. Among its features, the northern portion of the site contains a cross slab, a flat stone carved or incised with a cross, a type of monument associated in Ireland with early medieval Christian burial practice and found at many ancient ecclesiastical sites. Cross slabs vary considerably in age and form, and their presence at a burial ground often hints at origins that predate the formal parish church system by several centuries. The earthen bank enclosing the site is a low one, the kind of boundary that defines rather than fortifies, and is a common feature of older Irish burial grounds that were never fully absorbed into later institutional arrangements.