Mound, Tigroney, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Ritual/Ceremonial
On a shoulder of hill in Tigroney, County Wicklow, there sits a low grass-covered mound that most walkers would pass without a second glance.
Roughly fifteen metres across and barely half a metre in height, it is composed mainly of earth, though patches of stone are visible at the surface, hinting that something more deliberate lies beneath the turf. A field boundary runs along its south-western edge, suggesting that whoever later divided this land respected, or at least acknowledged, what was already there.
The mound occupies the highest point of its particular ridge, with open views north-west towards Croghan Moira and south-west towards Croghan Kinsella, two upland landmarks that would have oriented people across this part of Wicklow for centuries. That positioning is unlikely to be accidental. Mounds of this kind, whether burial cairns, ceremonial earthworks, or territorial markers, are frequently placed where they command or are visible from a wide surrounding area, using the landscape itself as a kind of address. The stonework visible within the earthen fabric may point to a more substantial original structure, perhaps a cairn, which over time became buried under accumulated soil and vegetation, leaving only this gentle rise to mark its presence.