Graveyard, Cloghscregg, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Burial Grounds
In the townland of Cloghscregg, in County Kilkenny, there is a graveyard whose details remain, for now, largely unrecorded in any publicly accessible form.
The name Cloghscregg, likely derived from the Irish meaning something close to a rocky or stony outcrop, hints at a landscape that has long been inhabited and marked by those who lived and died within it. Graveyards of this kind, modest and unclassified, are among the most common yet least-documented features of the Irish countryside.
Without further detail available, what can be said is that rural graveyards in Kilkenny frequently bear witness to centuries of local burial practice, sometimes attached to the ruins of an earlier church or chapel, sometimes existing independently of any surviving structure. Many were in use long before formal parish records began, and some contain grave markers so weathered as to be illegible, their inscriptions lost to moss and rain. The townland name itself is the only firm anchor here, and it places this site within a county whose landscape is densely layered with medieval and early Christian remains.