Children's burial ground, Kilkneedan, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Burial Grounds
On a west-facing ridge in County Kerry, in ground that is now simply pasture, lies a place that was once set apart for the most quietly sorrowful of purposes.
There are no headstones, no kerbing, no visible trace of any grave at all, yet the land here carries a name and a memory that local knowledge has preserved long after the physical evidence disappeared.
By the 1840s, when Ordnance Survey officers were recording the landscape and its features in their notebooks, the burial ground was already disused, noted as a small plot attached to Kilcredane Church. The local name for it identifies it as a children's burial ground, known in Irish tradition as a cillín, a category of unconsecrated ground where unbaptised infants and others who fell outside the formal rites of the Catholic Church were buried quietly, and separately, from the parish dead. Such sites are extraordinarily common across Ireland, often occupying the edges of ancient ecclesiastical enclosures, ringforts, or, as here, the immediate surroundings of early church sites. They were rarely marked with permanent monuments, the burials sometimes indicated only by small stones or no marker at all, which helps explain why the ground at Kilkneedan now shows nothing to the eye.
What makes this particular site worth pausing over is precisely that absence. The ridge-top pasture gives no indication of what it once held, and yet the local name has survived, passed down through generations as a kind of informal memorial in place of the physical one that was never built. The church itself, Kilcredane, stands nearby, and the relationship between that ruin and this blank field captures something about how grief was managed, and sometimes marginalised, across centuries of Irish rural life.