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St.
Patrick's
at Drumbeg
is a well known landmark of rural
Belfast, due to the unusual stylish inclusion of the
Lych Gate.
The site has been used by the Church
of Ireland as a place of worship since the mid 1600s.
This is the burial place of James Haddock, source
of a well known local ghost story.
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Gracehill
Co.Antrim
For
Moravians, the burial ground was known as "Gods
Acre" and had a strict layout. Men were buried
to the left and women to the right of a central path.
All headstones were the same shape and laid
flat on the ground. - All become equal in death.
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Creggan
Co.Armagh
The earliest headstone is dated 1685 but people were
being buried here centuries before that. The Parish
of Creggan was once one of the largest in Northern
Ireland, which today adds
further to its historic importance.
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Shankill,
Lurgan
The site of Shankill graveyard itself and the
old church has historic importance dating to pre-christian
times.
It is also known that there was a Mediaeval church
here which was probably destroyed in the "Nine
years War" at the end of the 16th Century.
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Donaghadee
Co.Down
It is known for certain that a church existed on
the site here at Donaghadee in 1622. Although it
is highly likely that the site also had a mediaeval
church going back several hundred years before, the
date of the first church isn't known. The earliest
dated gravestones to be found are from 1660
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Pubble
Co.Fermanagh
Just
a couple of miles from Tempo Co.Fermanagh. Pubble has
been used as a burial ground for over 1000 years
and
many ancient graves lie
outside the present boundary wall. Over the past 100
years or so some very curious and interesting headstones
have been uncovered. |
St.
Aidan's, Magilligan
The
site at St. Aidan's near Magilligan goes back to prehistoric times and thus has
great historic importance. Druids worshipped here. When early Christian
missionaries like St. Patrick and St. Columbkille came in the 5th and 6th Centuries.
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St.Mary's
at Ardess
The
graveyard at St. Mary's at Ardess in Co. Fermanagh
has the earliest known example of sculpted headstones
in Ireland. Not surprisingly, it is here you will
find the earliest sculpted headstone in N.I., fashioned
in the form of a Celtic cross. You will also find here
a "Famine Pit" where many bodies were buried. |
St.Lurach's
in Maghera
This
site was actually once home to a Cathedral which
stood here from the middle of the 12th
Century
until the
middle of the 13th. It’s believed that
there was a church founded here in the 6th
Century by Saint Lurach (or Lowry).
It continued in use until 1819 when the new Church
of Ireland was built just across the road.
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Ballywillan
near Portrush
Situated
a mile from Portrush, the name Ballywillin
translates to ' town of the Mill' The old graveyard is
unusually large compared to other churches of a
similar period, it has several decorative crosses in
differing styles which include Celtic. The graveyard
also has a direct link to the English crown! |
Leckpatrick
near Strabane
Leckpatrick
means ‘Flat stone of Patrick’ and
there’s a tradition that Saint Patrick himself
founded the first church here. It can’t be
verified but certainly there’s been a church
here from a very early period, probably before the
end of the first millennium A.D.” Some time
ago a farmer accidentally unearthed some stones in
nearby fields which display Celtic symbolic carvings. |
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Your Responses
Christina Flynn - Feb '08
From 1957 - June 1960 I attended Drumbeg Church and Sunday
School, I have very fond memories of the wonderful stain
glass windows, and the sound of the organ playing.
We lived inat 8 Quarterlands Road, and My Brother Bill
and I went to Hilhall Primary School. In January 1989 my
family and I visited the church, and surrounding area including
Hillhall and Lisburn some things had changed, however somethings
such as the Church were just as I remembered.
I look forward to visiting again in few years
to visit family who still live in Drumbeg.
Chris Flynn nee Crookshanks
Geelong Victoria Australia
Kerrie O'Neill Johnson -
Mar '07
What a wonderful site.So interesting, and will certainly
be visited when at such time I visit my Ancestral places
in Ireland.
Congratulations to the folk responsible for maintaining
this wonderful place.
Kerrie O'Neill Johnson Tasmania Australia.
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