Children's burial ground, Curry, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Burial Grounds
On the outskirts of Curry in County Mayo, a prehistoric earthwork has taken on a second, quieter life as a place of burial.
The site is a rath, a type of enclosed farmstead typical of early medieval Ireland, defined by a circular earthen bank originally built to protect a household and its livestock. At some point, local tradition repurposed this particular example for a very different kind of keeping: it became a children's burial ground, a cillín in the vernacular tradition.
Cillíní were informal burial grounds used across Ireland for unbaptised infants and others excluded from consecrated churchyards under Catholic practice. They occupy marginal or liminal spaces, old earthworks among them, because such places already existed at the edges of settled life and carried a sense of age and separateness. At Curry, the interior of the rath is scattered with loose stones, and among these lie several small stones embedded in the ground surface, each no more than about twenty centimetres across and fifteen centimetres high. They may be grave markers, though nothing confirms this with certainty. Their distribution across the interior appears irregular, with a concentration in the eastern half. In the north-western quadrant, some stones are arranged in rough alignments that seem to outline small rectangular plots, each measuring between half a metre and a metre across, a scale consistent with infant graves.
The site carries no inscription, no formal monument, and no obvious announcement of its purpose. What remains is a field of undistinguished stones inside an ancient earthen ring, legible only if you already know what to look for.
