{"id":224,"date":"2022-09-17T20:21:35","date_gmt":"2022-09-17T20:21:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost:10045\/?p=224"},"modified":"2022-09-17T20:21:36","modified_gmt":"2022-09-17T20:21:36","slug":"saint-johns-graveyard-dublin-road-kilkenny","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost:10045\/saint-johns-graveyard-dublin-road-kilkenny\/","title":{"rendered":"SAINT JOHN’S GRAVEYARD DUBLIN ROAD KILKENNY"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

13 SEPTEMBER 2022<\/p>\n\n\n\n

When I first visited this old graveyard I noted that the colour of the gravestones was different to what I normally see in Irish graveyards [orange\/brown rather than grey\/white]. I assume that gravestones were covered in what was an orange algae, lichen or fungi however this visited I noticed that, in many cases, the orange material had been bleached pure white<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Official Description: \u201cA picturesque graveyard forming an appealing feature in the streetscape on the road leading out of Kilkenny to the south-east. Having origins in a fourteenth-century leper hospital the grounds are of special significance as the location of a seventeenth-century Catholic chapel, thereby representing an early ecclesiastical site in the locality: furthermore it is believed that fragments survive spanning the fourteenth and seventeenth centuries, thereby emphasising the archaeological importance of the site. The graveyard remains of additional importance for the associations with a number of Kilkenny’s foremost dignitaries or personalities while a collection of cut-stone markers displaying expert stone masonry identify the considerable artistic design”<\/p>\n\n\n\n