Barrow (Ring Barrow), Knockloe, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Barrows
A low circular mound sitting in a flat field beside an abandoned country house might, at first glance, seem like an unremarkable feature of the landscape.
What makes this particular earthwork in County Wicklow genuinely interesting is not its grandeur but its ambiguity. Classified as a ring barrow, a type of prehistoric funerary monument in which a central mound is surrounded by a circular ditch or fosse and sometimes an outer bank, the site fits the basic profile well enough. The mound measures approximately nine metres in diameter, enclosed by a shallow fosse about two metres wide and only twenty centimetres deep, with faint traces of an external bank surviving in the southwest quadrant. Yet the question of whether it belongs to the Bronze Age or to a much more recent past has never been fully resolved.
The mound is one of five possible barrows clustered together within a small, narrow field measuring roughly 59 metres northeast to southwest and 110 metres north to south, lying immediately to the north of the now-ruined Knockloe House and along the western side of its driveway. That clustering is part of what gives researchers pause. A group of five monuments packed into such a confined space, surviving in unusually good condition, and sitting so close to a 19th-century country house is an uncommon combination. The landowner offered one explanation: the field was used for ringing horses in the 19th century, a practice of exercising horses in circles, which could plausibly have produced circular earthworks over time. Aerial photography adds another complication. On an Ordnance Survey Ireland photograph from 2005, one of the earthworks in the northern part of the field appears to be nothing more than a circular feeding trough rather than an ancient monument. The proximity to Knockloe House, the density of the grouping, and these alternative explanations have led archaeologists to question whether any of these features genuinely date to prehistory, or whether the landscape was shaped entirely by the working routines of a 19th-century estate.