Grave Yard, Gaile, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Burial Grounds
The graveyard at Gaile sits on a south-facing slope of high ground in County Tipperary, and at first glance it reads as a fairly ordinary rural burial ground enclosed by a limestone rubble wall.
Look more carefully and the site begins to show its layers. The existing L-shaped enclosure, measuring roughly 44 metres north to south and 30 metres east to west, is demonstrably not the original boundary. Grass-covered wall-footings are still visible about six metres to the north of the old church ruin, and an external fosse, a shallow ditch running outside a boundary, traces around the church to the east, south, and west. At its southern and eastern reaches, this earlier enclosure sits approximately 25 metres beyond the present wall, suggesting that the burial ground once occupied a considerably larger area before the 19th-century wall pulled its boundary inward.
The church itself occupies the northern sector of the graveyard and effectively serves as the northern boundary, with the enclosure wall running off from its north-east angle and returning to the centre of the west gable. Several carved architectural fragments have been incorporated into the graveyard as grave-markers, apparently during a tidying-up scheme at some point, which means pieces of dressed stonework that once belonged to a building are now doing quiet duty as memorials. Stretches of the graveyard wall have been patched and rebuilt using concrete blocks, most visibly along the western and southern sides. Beyond the earlier enclosure boundary, a series of earthworks spread out to the north, east, and south. These low rectangular forms may represent the remains of small fields or settlement activity associated with the church, though there is also a possibility that some of them are quarry hollows, pits dug to extract stone for building, a pattern noted at the nearby church site at Ballytarsna.

