Graveyard, Rosahane, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Burial Grounds
A small graveyard in Rosahane, County Wicklow, holds an ecclesiastical curiosity that has since gone missing.
The burial ground itself is oval in shape, a form that often signals early medieval origins in the Irish landscape, where circular or oval enclosures frequently mark the footprint of ancient monastic or devotional sites long predating the headstones that survive today. The earliest legible inscription here dates to 1752, and the ground was still receiving the occasional burial as recently as 1990.
What complicates the picture is a baptismal font that was once recorded on the site. Writing in 1959, the researcher Price documented a sub-rectangular font with an unusual slot opening cut into one side, a detail that suggests a deliberate functional design rather than simple wear. Fonts of this kind are rare survivals, typically associated with early Christian ecclesiastical activity, and their presence in a graveyard often points to a church that has otherwise vanished entirely. By the time inspectors visited in 1990, the font was gone. It had not been lost or broken up but moved, reportedly transferred to another graveyard, though which one was not recorded. An object documented in one place, absent from it thirty years later, and now somewhere unspecified makes for an oddly incomplete story, the kind that quietly accumulates around sites where the physical evidence and the paper trail have drifted apart.