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| A 17th century headstone in the old cemetery in Dunlavin village, Co. Wicklow. © Eugene Brennan |
I visited the little park adjacent to the old market house in Dunlavin on my Sunday cycle yesterday. I've cycled past it dozens of times over the last thirty years, but never actually went in. This was the location of a 17th-century church and graveyard, the graveyard now having been “recycled”, with the headstones stacked up against the back wall of the space. It’s a practice I’m not too fond of, and it's something that has occurred in several locations in Dublin—Cemeteries have been turned into parks, such as at the rear of St Mary’s Church (foundation stone laid in 1700) on Mary Street, and at St Kevin’s Church, Camden Row (behind the now-demolished Kevin Street College of Technology, my alma mater). It was a shock to discover on Street View that the college had gone, but it was an ugly building.
The cemetery in Dunlavin has a couple of old 17th-century headstones, something which isn’t commonplace, as the inscriptions on headstones older than the 18th century are normally eroded and illegible unless they’ve been sheltered from the elements.
Edit: Dunlavin local historian Chris Lawlor has kindly sent me a link to his thesis, The Establishment and Evolution of an Irish Village: The Case of Dunlavin, County Wicklow 1600 -1910, which includes some details about the cemetery on p. 44:
Map courtesy Tailte Éireann.
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| Another 17th century headstone in Dunlavin old cemetery. © Eugene Brennan |
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| The location of the cemetery in Dunlavin village. Image courtesy Tailte Éireann. |
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