Kilcrimple Grave Yard, Marblehill, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Burial Grounds
On a north-facing slope outside Marblehill in County Galway, there is a burial ground with no headstones, no grave-markers, and no obvious sign that anyone was ever laid to rest there.
The ground simply slopes away into pasture, and without knowing what to look for, a person could walk across it without a second thought. What survives is almost entirely a matter of subtle earthwork: a low, levelled bank running around the perimeter, no more than twenty centimetres above the surrounding ground on its outer face, hinting that the site was once enclosed, even if that enclosure has long since been reduced to a faint ridge in the grass.
The 1838 Ordnance Survey six-inch map recorded the site as a roughly D-shaped unenclosed burial ground, already named Kilcrimple Grave Yard, which suggests the name and the memory of its function were still in local circulation at that time. By the 1920 edition of the same mapping series, the shape had shifted in appearance to something more rectilinear, measuring approximately 33 metres on its northeast to southwest axis and around 29 metres across. Whether that change reflects actual alteration to the ground or simply differences in how the surveyors recorded it is difficult to say. The "kil" element of the placename, derived from the Irish "cill", typically denotes an early ecclesiastical enclosure or cell, and burial grounds carrying that prefix are often associated with early medieval Christian activity, sometimes predating the formal parish church network by centuries. No such structure has been identified here, but the name alone carries considerable weight as a trace of what may once have been a much more significant place in the local landscape.