Children's burial ground, Clash, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Burial Grounds
At Clash in County Kerry, a densely overgrown oval mound holds two identities at once: it is likely the remains of a cashel, a type of early medieval stone enclosure typically built to protect a homestead or ecclesiastical site, and it is also remembered by local people as a burial ground for unbaptised children.
The Irish name given to it, Cahireenaleanbh, translates roughly as "little cahir of the children," and that name carries a particular weight. In Irish Catholic tradition, children who died without baptism were excluded from consecrated ground, and so communities created informal burial places for them, often at liminal spots already charged with older meaning: ancient earthworks, field boundaries, sites that existed at the edge of the official religious world.
The site measures approximately forty metres north to south and thirty-five metres east to west, its oval outline still legible beneath the overgrowth. By the 1940s, when collectors working on the Schools Manuscript project recorded it, the place was already well established in local memory as Cahireenaleanbh. Those same accounts, drawn from oral tradition in the area, noted that mounds of earth marking graves were still visible at that time. The tradition extends beyond children, however. There is also a local belief that friars and other adults were buried here, which would place it within a broader pattern of informal or marginal burial sites that accumulated multiple layers of use and memory over centuries, each generation adding its own dead to ground already considered set apart.