Children's burial ground, Ennistimon, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Burial Grounds
At the top of a hill in Ennistymon, County Clare, there is a burial ground that leaves no mark on the surface of the earth.
No stones, no mounds, no visible boundary of any kind signals what lies beneath. The only indication that the ground has any particular significance is in local memory, passed down through the town rather than recorded in any formal monument.
The site is what is known in Ireland as a cillín, an informal burial ground used for unbaptised children. Under Catholic theological doctrine that persisted for centuries, infants who died before baptism were held to be excluded from consecrated ground, and so communities quietly established their own places for these burials, often at liminal spots: hilltops, field boundaries, the margins of bogs, or the edges of older, pre-Christian sites. This particular ground sits roughly 45 metres north of the wall enclosing a Church of Ireland church and its graveyard, close enough to consecrated land to suggest a kind of proximity by design. According to local knowledge, the site was blessed by a priest in the 1950s, a gesture that acknowledged what the ground contained without formally incorporating it into the structures of the institutional Church. That act of blessing, belated and quiet, reflects a broader softening in attitudes that was beginning to take hold in mid-twentieth-century Ireland, even if the theological position on limbo would not be formally reconsidered until much later.