Megalithic tomb - wedge tomb, Gortacullin, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Megalithic Tombs
In the townland of Gortacullin, in County Clare, a wedge tomb sits in the landscape, one of several hundred such monuments scattered across Ireland and concentrated particularly in the west.
Wedge tombs are the most numerous class of megalithic tomb in the country, built during the late Neolithic and into the early Bronze Age, roughly between 2500 and 2000 BC. The name describes their basic form: a roofed stone gallery that is wider and higher at one end, tapering toward the other, typically oriented to the west or south-west. They were collective burial monuments, used over generations, and their builders moved and shaped stones of considerable weight without metal tools or wheeled transport.
Gortacullin itself is a small rural townland in Clare, a county whose limestone karst terrain has preserved an unusual density of prehistoric remains. The Burren to the north of the county is the most studied concentration, but megalithic monuments appear across Clare more broadly, often in fields that have been farmed around rather than through for millennia. A wedge tomb in such a setting would have been a focal point in the Neolithic landscape, likely associated with ancestor veneration and the marking of territory as farming communities spread westward across Ireland.