Wednesday 31 July 2013

Walking the Dead – following old funeral roads, in the Midlands, Stepney and in the Comeragh Mountains

I have no idea of the extent of traditional funeral routes in the UK and Ireland.. I do know one of the oldest and most persistent superstitions is that any land over which a corpse is carried becomes a public right of way.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corpse_road  -- and so my dad believed was the origin of the right of way along the east side of Ridgehill Wood, Kingswinford



From thew depths of my memory - I can recall that speculation that the path that lay across fields from St Mary's Whitechapel to St Dunstan's Stepney was one such traditional funeral route (although St Mary Matfelon also had a burial ground). Subsequently it has become the road "Stepney Way".
Possible coffin route from Aldgate and Whitechapel to St Dunstan's Stepney

The Nire Valley
below is an item taken from http://sherpamick-thecomeraghs.blogspot.ie/2013/06/walking-dead-following-old-funeral-road.html

Funerals are no fun, it's a serious business. A few generations ago going to a funeral in the Nire or anywhere in the Comeragh Mountains was a commitment of at least one day or more. The Nire did not have a church until 1862 and the graveyard did not come into common use until 1926, thus up to the late 1920s the natives from the Nire were buried in Rathgormack, six miles away across the Comeragh Mountain and across the mountain is the way they went. The funeral path went from the Nire to Rathgormack passing through the Gap along the route called Bóithrín na Sochraide (The funeral road).  It is by no means unique but it is still traveled by walkers today. In a mid 18th century the road was engineered as part of famine relief works (this was a famine that occurred before the great famine of 1845) and parts of the engineering are still visible today especially as you approach the Gap on the Nire side.
The coffin was “shouldered” carried on long poles and along the way there were places where the coffin was placed on a large boulder and everyone took a rest, one such boulder exists on the Nire side called Cloch an Choirp (The body rock). After a rest the funeral proceeded to the Gap, here some mourners would have headed back to the Nire while others from Rathgormack would have waited to join the cortege. The burial took place in Rathgormack and the poles for carrying the coffin were left in the cemetery. The last funeral went through the gap sometime around 1930, a localised outbreak of influenza in 1926 saw three members of one family die in the space of one week and all three were buried in the grounds of the Nire Church and from then on more and more locals were buried in the Nire.
The Funeral path today makes an interesting walking route you can choose to walk from the Nire just to the Gap or continue all the way to Rathgormack. Why not head for the Nire this week end and follow the Green Arrows that will bring you along the way from the Nire Car-park to the Gap.

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