Burial ground, Caherdesert, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Burial Grounds
In the pasture of Caherdesert, on a south-facing slope in County Cork, there is said to be a graveyard.
No stone marks it, no enclosure wall gives it away, and no visible trace of any kind disturbs the grass. The dead here, if they are here, lie entirely out of sight.
What keeps the site on record is local tradition, the kind of oral knowledge passed between neighbours that often outlasts physical evidence by centuries. Communities in rural Ireland frequently maintained memory of burial places long after surface monuments had disappeared through agricultural clearance, gradual erosion, or simple neglect. The name Caherdesert is itself suggestive: caher derives from the Irish cathair, referring to a stone fort or enclosure, while desert, from the Irish díseart, typically signals an early Christian hermitage or secluded religious settlement. Such places were often chosen as burial grounds, and their association with sanctity could endure in local memory even when every visible structure had gone. Without excavation, it is impossible to say who was buried here, in what period, or under what circumstances.
