Barrow (Ring Barrow), Carbury, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Barrows
Carbury Hill in County Kildare rises to around 470 feet above sea level, and near its summit the ground holds the faint but legible traces of prehistoric burial monuments clustered so closely together that they amount to a small ceremonial landscape. One of these, a ring barrow sitting just north of the hilltop, is barely visible to the naked eye on the ground, measuring roughly nine metres across and enclosed by a narrow fosse, a shallow circular ditch cut into the earth. A possible outer bank survives in traces along the north-western to north-eastern arc, giving the monument an estimated total diameter of around thirteen metres. It is modest in scale, but that modesty is part of what makes it interesting: the effort to identify and record such a subtle earthwork speaks to how much can persist in a landscape when conditions allow.
The site belongs to a group of four closely associated monuments on and around the Carbury Hill summit. Two further ring barrows lie within fifty metres, one approximately twenty metres to the south-west and another around fifty metres to the west-north-west. A possible mound barrow sits roughly 125 metres to the south-south-west, on the summit itself. Ring barrows are a type of funerary monument found across Ireland and Britain, typically consisting of a low central mound or platform surrounded by a circular ditch, sometimes with an accompanying outer bank. They are generally associated with the Bronze Age, though dating any individual example without excavation remains difficult. The clustering of several such monuments in one elevated location suggests this hilltop held sustained significance over time, perhaps as a place where the dead were returned to a skyline visible for miles around. This particular ring barrow was reported by Jean-Charles Caillere, and its presence was confirmed through aerial imagery, a reminder that some of Ireland's older monuments are still being formally brought into the record.
