Graveyard, Kerdiffstown, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Burial Grounds
Wedged into a narrow geographical corridor in County Kildare, this old burial ground occupies a peculiar slot of land, caught between the northward flow of the Morrell River to the east and a low but sharply sided ridge running northwest to southwest on its western flank. The graveyard sits at the foot of that ridge, compressed into a roughly square plot of around forty metres by forty metres, and it appears to have no formal enclosure, which lends it an untethered, ambiguous quality. The vegetation has taken considerable hold, yet burial markers from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries remain legible among the growth.
What gives the site its longer reach back through time is the presence of a medieval church and two gravestones that predate the majority of the visible markers by centuries. One graveslab is medieval, the other dates to the seventeenth century. Gravestabs of this kind, flat carved slabs laid over or near a burial, were among the more personal and durable forms of commemoration available in early modern Ireland, and their survival here alongside a ruined church suggests a site of continuous use across several hundred years. The geography may partly explain the continuity: the narrow pass formed by river and ridge would have made this a natural and perhaps significant point in the local landscape, the kind of place communities return to.