Graveyard, Donard, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Burial Grounds
At the edge of a south-facing slope in County Wicklow, a walled graveyard sits on a rare patch of level ground, sheltered from the gradient as if the landscape paused deliberately to accommodate it.
What makes the site quietly compelling is not just the setting but the layers of time that have accumulated within a fairly modest rectangle, roughly 45 metres by 40 metres, bounded by a modern stone wall that frames something considerably older.
The north side of the graveyard is occupied by the ruins of a nave and chancel parish church, a building type common to medieval Ireland in which a simple rectangular nave for the congregation connects to a smaller chancel reserved for the clergy. This particular example dates to the fifteenth or sixteenth century, placing its construction in the late medieval period when such modest rural churches were still being built or rebuilt across Leinster. Two medieval graveslabs survive in association with the site. One lies inside the church itself; the other rests against the outer face of the east wall, exposed to the elements and visible from outside the building. Graveslabs of this type are flat carved stone markers, typically incised with a cross or other decoration, and were often associated with local families of some standing. Their presence here suggests the site retained a degree of importance to the local community well into the medieval period, even if the precise individuals commemorated are no longer identifiable.