Grave Yd, Ardfinnan, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Burial Grounds
The Church of Ireland building at the centre of Ardfinnan's walled graveyard sits on ground that has been considered sacred for well over a thousand years, yet nothing visible at the surface confirms that earlier claim.
No stone, no earthwork, no outline in the grass betrays the monastery that once stood here, nor the medieval church that followed it. The continuity is real, the evidence almost entirely gone.
St. Fionan Lobhar, a figure associated with the early Irish church, founded a monastery on this site in the seventh century. The present church is believed to occupy roughly the same ground, though the link is one of tradition rather than surviving fabric. The graveyard itself is sub-rectangular, approximately 47 metres north-west to south-east and around 50 metres north-east to south-west, enclosed by a stone wall with an entrance set into the south-western side. In the south-east corner, tucked against that boundary wall, stands an early seventeenth-century chest tomb, a box-shaped raised monument of a type common in post-Reformation Ireland, which here represents one of the few datable features the site has to offer above ground. It is a quiet anomaly: a monument from the 1600s marking the edge of a space whose origins lie a millennium earlier, with nothing in between that the eye can find.
