Barrow, Brewel, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Barrows
On the north-eastern slope of Brewel Hill in County Kildare, a prehistoric burial monument has all but vanished into the pasture. What was recorded in 1985 as barely perceptible traces of a low circular earthwork, roughly sixteen metres across and no more than forty centimetres above the base of its surrounding fosse, is no longer clearly identifiable at ground level. The fosse, a shallow encircling ditch that defines the form of a ringbarrow, has been absorbed into the field so thoroughly that a visitor walking over it would have no reason to pause.
Ringbarrows are a type of low funerary mound, typically dating to the Bronze Age, defined by a central raised area enclosed within a ditch or fosse, sometimes with an outer bank. They tend to cluster, and Brewel Hill is a good illustration of that habit. At least three further examples were recorded in the immediate vicinity, one lying around 120 metres to the north-east, another roughly 240 metres to the south-east, and a fourth approximately 200 metres to the south. Together they suggest that this hillside held some significance in the prehistoric landscape, a place chosen repeatedly for burial or commemoration rather than a single isolated act. What survives above ground today tells almost nothing of that, but the record from 1985 at least preserves a description before the earthwork faded further, and there is reason to think sub-surface features may still be intact beneath the grass.
