Children's burial ground, Canower, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Burial Grounds
At the head of Cuan na Beírtri Buí, a small inlet on the Connemara coast, a low hummock sits at the boundary between two townlands.
It is barely conspicuous, half-lost beneath furze, yet it carries the particular weight of a cillín, an informal burial ground used over centuries for unbaptised children and others who, under Catholic tradition, could not be interred in consecrated ground. These sites are scattered across Ireland in their hundreds, typically tucked into liminal spots, field edges, ancient ringforts, or shorelines, and this one is no different in that regard. What makes it quietly arresting is its position right at the seashore, divided precisely along the mearing wall, the boundary line between the townlands of Rosroe and Canower.
On the Rosroe side, small boulders are still visible among the furze, the understated markers that tend to characterise these places, where formal headstones were rarely erected and the graves were often known only to local families. On the Canower side, where land has been cleared, there are traces of a curving fosse, a shallow ditch or earthwork, suggesting the ground was once more deliberately defined than it now appears. The detail was recorded by T. Robinson, whose meticulous mapping of Connemara brought many such marginal, half-forgotten features to wider attention.