Graveyard, Eanach Dhúin, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Burial Grounds
At Annaghdown on the eastern shore of Lough Corrib, a graveyard wraps itself around a medieval church and the stump of a round tower, the whole complex quietly folding centuries of use into a single enclosure.
What makes the arrangement particularly striking is that this graveyard has effectively merged with a second one immediately to its north, so that the boundary between them has dissolved into a shared landscape of headstones, grass, and old stone walls.
The site belongs to a broader monastic complex at Annaghdown, known in Irish as Eanach Dhúin, a place with deep ecclesiastical roots in the west of Ireland. The graveyard itself measures roughly 78 metres on its northwest to southeast axis and about 63 metres across. Its eastern side is defined by a plastered concrete wall with piers, which continues the line of the wall belonging to the northern graveyard. The southern and western boundaries are of mortared construction, and the southern wall has been almost entirely swallowed by ivy. Entry is made by a set of steps at the northern end, which opens onto a clear grassy area. The burials visible today are marked mostly by upright headstones from the 19th and 20th centuries, but to the north of the church a number of 18th-century recumbent graveslabs survive, lying flat and carrying inscribed text, a format common in Irish burial grounds before the upright headstone became standard. To the southwest, a vault, now much collapsed, is also visible; vaults of this kind were typically above-ground or semi-subterranean family burial chambers, built for those of some local standing.
The steps at the northern end provide the practical point of entry, and once inside it is worth moving towards the church to find the older recumbent slabs, which are easy to overlook among the more prominent later headstones. The collapsed vault to the southwest repays a closer look for anyone interested in the range of burial traditions the site contains across its different periods of use.