Cremation pit, Cloonagowan, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Burial Sites
In the townland of Cloonagowan, in County Clare, the ground holds the remains of a cremation pit, a category of monument that tends to attract less attention than a dolmen or a ringfort but speaks just as directly to the people who once lived here.
Cremation pits are exactly what they sound like: shallow or moderate depressions in the earth where human remains were burned, or where the burnt bones and ash from a funeral pyre were deposited, sometimes accompanied by pottery or small grave goods. They are associated broadly with prehistoric burial practice, appearing across Ireland from the Neolithic through to the Bronze Age, and they are easy to overlook, often surviving only as a slight discolouration in the soil rather than any visible surface feature.
The specific details of this particular pit, its date, its excavation history, what if anything was recovered from it, remain out of reach for the moment. What can be said is that Cloonagowan is a quiet rural townland, and the presence of a recorded cremation pit there places it within a wider landscape of prehistoric activity that Clare shares with much of the west of Ireland. The county contains dozens of such funerary monuments, many of them poorly documented, representing communities who marked the passage of their dead through fire long before any written record existed in Ireland.