Grave Yard, Ballynakill, Co. Offaly
Co. Offaly |
Burial Grounds
A single standing gable is all that remains of a medieval church at Ballynakill, rising from the centre of a small graveyard on a gentle rise in County Offaly.
The church itself has almost entirely vanished; only the west gable wall still stands, marooned among post-medieval headstones that date mostly from the nineteenth century onwards. It is the kind of place where the absence of a building communicates more than its presence might, one surviving wall marking a long ecclesiastical history that the surrounding graves have quietly continued.
The graveyard itself is roughly square, measuring approximately 40 metres north to south and 38 metres east to west, enclosed by a stone wall of comparatively recent construction. Beyond that wall, grass-covered banks and low scarps suggest the faint outlines of earlier enclosures or a field system, the sort of subtle earthwork that reads as little more than uneven ground to the casual eye but points to activity that predates the graveyard's current form. The wider landscape compounds this sense of layered occupation: Ballinrath Castle lies roughly 590 metres to the west-southwest, and Ballykilleen ringfort, a circular earthwork enclosure of the early medieval period, sits around 950 metres to the east. From the slight elevation of the graveyard, these neighbouring monuments would once have been visible landmarks in an open landscape.
The site is elevated enough to offer views in all directions, which makes the lone gable easier to locate once you are in the area. The earthworks outside the boundary wall are most legible in low winter light or when the grass is short, when the banks and scarps cast enough shadow to reveal their shape.
