Barrow (Ditch barrow), Friarsfield, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Barrows
In a patch of poorly drained Tipperary pasture, at the foot of an east-facing slope, a shallow circular depression marks the outline of a prehistoric burial monument that most walkers would step over without a second glance.
The feature is a ditch barrow, a type of funerary mound defined not by a raised earthen heap but by a surrounding fosse, the old term for a cut ditch or trench. Here the fosse is modest, roughly 2.2 metres wide and only about 13 centimetres deep, enclosing a near-circular area measuring approximately 7 metres north to south and 7.5 metres east to west. The interior retains a gentle eastward tilt, following the natural lie of the land beneath it.
What makes the site quietly interesting is less its own dimensions than its setting within a wider prehistoric landscape. Within roughly 115 to 135 metres to the north-east lies an enclosure and a ring-barrow, another variety of circular monument typically associated with Bronze Age burial practice, while a possible embanked barrow sits about 100 metres to the south-east. The clustering of these features across a relatively small area of Friarsfield suggests this was once a place of some ceremonial or funerary significance, a locality where the dead were returned to the ground in organised, structured ways over what may have been a considerable span of time. A modern drainage channel cuts the ground nearby, running roughly north-east to south-west about two metres from the ditch barrow's edge, a reminder that the waterlogged conditions that have both preserved and obscured the monument have been a persistent feature of this corner of the county.