Burial ground, Lambay Island, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Burial Grounds
Somewhere between the Castle and the sea on Lambay Island, skeletons were discovered, their exact resting place now lost to imprecision and time.
The burial ground recorded here is not marked by a graveyard wall or a row of headstones. It exists instead as an archaeological footnote, a disturbance in the earth that was noticed, briefly documented, and never quite pinned down.
The record comes from R.A.S. MacAlister, the prolific Irish archaeologist whose 1929 survey remains a key reference for sites of this kind. His account places the find near a row of cottages lying south of the boathouse, somewhere in the corridor between the castle complex and the shoreline. Beyond that, the location was not precisely recorded, which means the burial ground sits in a frustrating category: known but unmapped, acknowledged but unverified. Lambay itself has a long human story. The island, roughly three kilometres off the Dublin coast near Rush, was occupied in prehistoric times and later became a place of early Christian activity. Viking raiders used it as a base in the ninth century. That skeletons should turn up in its soil is not surprising; that they were recorded so loosely is a reminder of how archaeological standards varied in the early twentieth century.
Lambay is a private island, owned by the Baring family, and access is not generally available to the public. The island is perhaps better known today as a nature reserve, home to a colony of red-necked wallabies alongside its seabird populations. For those with a particular interest in its archaeology, the most realistic engagement is through published sources rather than a visit. The burial ground itself, even if access were possible, would offer nothing visible on the surface; its interest lies entirely in what MacAlister recorded and in what remains unresolved. The cottages near which the skeletons were found may still stand, but the ground between them and the boathouse keeps whatever it holds without any formal marker or excavation report to explain it further.