Burial, An Cheathrú Rua Theas, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Burial Sites
On the southern reaches of An Cheathrú Rua, the Connemara peninsula that pushes into Galway Bay along the western seaboard, a burial site sits recorded but largely undescribed.
It has a place in the archaeological register, a townland, a county, a classification, and almost nothing else that is currently available to the public. That combination of official acknowledgement and near-total silence is, in its own way, telling.
An Cheathrú Rua Theas, known in English as South Carraroe, is part of one of the most densely Irish-speaking stretches of the Conacht Gaeltacht, a landscape of low rock, thin soil, and Atlantic light where prehistoric and early medieval remains have a habit of surfacing in unexpected places. Burial sites in this part of Galway range from Bronze Age cist graves, in which a body was placed within a small stone-lined box set into the ground, to early Christian cemeteries that remained in local use long after any church structure had disappeared. Without further detail in the available record, it is not possible to say with confidence which tradition this particular site belongs to, what was found there, or when it first came to archaeological attention. What can be said is that the region has been continuously inhabited for several thousand years, and that the ground here tends to hold its history quietly.