Barrow (Ditch barrow), Bartoose, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Barrows
In a low-lying field of reclaimed pasture near Bartoose in County Tipperary, a small circular monument sits quietly in the wet ground, its edges blurred by centuries of agricultural change.
It is a ditch barrow, a type of prehistoric burial monument defined not by an earthen mound but by a surrounding fosse, or ditch, cut into the ground to demarcate a sacred or funerary interior. This particular example measures only five metres across, with a shallow encircling ditch roughly two to two and a half metres wide and barely ten centimetres deep at present. What makes it quietly arresting is how little of it remains visible, and yet how clearly it can still be read as a deliberate, bounded space.
The monument was identified during a field survey carried out by Mark Keegan on 5 November 2004. By that point, the surrounding land had already been reclaimed and levelled for pasture, and local information suggests the barrow once had a considerably more regular form before that drainage and improvement work altered the landscape around it. The fosse is now irregular and shallow, its original geometry softened by the same processes that turned this corner of Tipperary into the flat, wet grazing land it is today. The interior remains level and clear of overgrowth, which at least preserves a legible outline of what was once a more sharply defined enclosure.