Grave Yard, Corcoransacres, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Burial Grounds
In the townland of Corcoransacres in County Sligo there is a graveyard that resists easy explanation.
The name of the place itself is striking, the kind of compound that suggests a long-forgotten family or landholding absorbed into the landscape over centuries, yet the burial ground associated with it remains largely undocumented in any publicly accessible form. It sits within a county that has no shortage of ancient and early Christian burial sites, many of them attached to ruined churches or the remnants of monastic enclosures, but Corcoransacres keeps its history closer.
Sligo as a whole has a dense archaeological record, shaped by prehistoric settlement, early Christian activity, and the turbulent land reorganisations of the medieval and post-medieval periods. Townland names beginning with elements like "Corcoran" often reflect Gaelic family associations, and "acres" appended to a surname was a common way of identifying land parcels held by or associated with a particular sept or household. Whether this graveyard predates, postdates, or runs alongside those naming conventions is not currently possible to say with any certainty. What is clear is that it has been recorded as a monument, meaning it has been identified as a place of archaeological or historical significance worthy of formal protection, even if the detail behind that classification has not yet been made widely available.