Linkardstown burial, Jerpointchurch, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Burial Sites
Near the atmospheric ruins of Jerpointchurch in County Kilkenny, a burial of a particular and rare type lies recorded in the archaeological landscape.
It belongs to a category known as a Linkardstown burial, a term that refers to a distinctive form of Neolithic interment found in Ireland, typically involving a single adult male placed within a large stone-lined cist, the whole covered by a round mound or cairn. These burials date broadly to the fourth millennium BC and are named after a site in County Carlow where one of the type examples was excavated. Only a small number have been identified across the country, which makes each one notable in its own right.
The Jerpointchurch example sits within a locality already layered with medieval and earlier history. The area around Jerpointchurch, distinct from the better-known Jerpoint Abbey a short distance away, preserves the remains of a deserted medieval village, a Romanesque church, and early grave slabs. The presence of a Neolithic monument here suggests that this stretch of the Nore valley attracted settlement and ritual activity across an enormous span of time, long before the Cistercians arrived in the twelfth century or the medieval parish took shape around it. Linkardstown-type burials are generally interpreted as the interments of high-status individuals, possibly community leaders or figures of particular social significance, given the care and labour invested in their construction.