Graveslab (present location), Kildalton, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Tombs & Memorials
In the townland of Kildalton in County Kilkenny, a carved graveslab sits in what the record describes only as its "present location", a phrase that quietly signals a history of movement.
Graveslabs of this kind, flat carved stones placed over or beside burials, were commonly produced in medieval Ireland, often bearing incised crosses, interlace patterns, or inscriptions that identified the deceased. The fact that this one is catalogued by its current resting place rather than its original context suggests it has been displaced at some point, lifted from a grave, a ruined church floor, or a collapsed chancel, and set down somewhere else entirely.
Kildalton itself is a place-name with ecclesiastical roots, derived from the Irish for "church of the foster-son" or "disciple", a naming pattern associated with early Christian foundations. County Kilkenny has a particularly dense concentration of medieval church sites and associated funerary monuments, many of them now fragmented, relocated, or incorporated into later structures. A graveslab separated from its original burial context is not unusual in this landscape; agricultural clearance, road-building, and the general recycling of dressed stone across centuries all contributed to the dispersal of such objects. Without further detail about the slab's carving, dimensions, or the circumstances of its relocation, the stone remains something of an open question, present in a place, but belonging, in some meaningful sense, elsewhere.