Grave Yard, Ardamullivan, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Burial Grounds
On the north-eastern edge of Shanaglish village in County Galway, set into rocky pastureland, an L-shaped burial ground holds something quietly puzzling: among the legible grave-markers from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, numerous small stones have been set upright in the earth with no inscription at all.
No name, no date, no formula of remembrance. They simply stand, interspersed with the marked graves, in an interior so overgrown that the full extent of the site is difficult to read at a glance.
The enclosure measures roughly eighty metres on its longer axis and thirty on the shorter, bounded by a stone wall with a single entrance to the south. The uninscribed stones are a common feature of older Irish burial practice, particularly in rural areas where carved headstones were either too costly or simply not customary. They mark graves nonetheless, and their anonymity is not necessarily a sign of neglect; in many communities, the identity of the buried was maintained through oral tradition rather than carved stone, a tradition that becomes harder to trace with each passing generation. What makes this site notable is the density of these unmarked stones alongside the dateable nineteenth-century markers, suggesting a burial ground in continuous use across a long span, with older layers of the community lying quietly beneath the more recent and more legible ones.