Burial ground, Holdenstown, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Burial Grounds
On a low gravel ridge in south Kilkenny, bounded by a stream to the east and a waterlogged hollow to the north, ninety-four people were laid to rest sometime in the early medieval period, their graves arranged in seven loose rows, orientated broadly east to west in the Christian fashion.
Four of those grave cuts were dug but never used. That detail alone gives the site a quiet strangeness: the physical labour of preparation, and then nothing.
The burial ground at Holdenstown came to light during excavations carried out in 2007 and 2008, ahead of road improvement works on the N9/N10 corridor between Kilcullen and Waterford. The burials were shallow inhumations, meaning the bodies were interred directly in the earth without coffins or substantial covering, a common practice in early medieval Ireland where small, unenclosed cemeteries often grew up around a community without any obvious church or formal enclosure to anchor them. The graves had not survived entirely intact; post-medieval ploughing had cut through many of them, the furrows of later agricultural activity slicing across the rows of the dead. Alongside the cemetery, excavators uncovered two clusters of hearths, pits, and post-holes, suggesting some form of settlement or working activity in the immediate area, along with five kilns. The combination of burials and productive features points to a community that both lived and died on this ridge, using the raised, well-drained ground for the full range of daily and ritual life.