Cairn, Ballinphull, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Cairns
In the townland of Ballinphull, in County Sligo, there is a cairn.
That much is certain. A cairn, in the Irish archaeological sense, is typically a mound of stones raised over a burial, sometimes dating back thousands of years to the Neolithic or Bronze Age, when the construction of such monuments was a considerable communal undertaking. Sligo is already well known for its concentration of prehistoric stone monuments, from the great passage tomb complex at Carrowmore to the ridge of Knocknarea, where a vast unexcavated cairn is traditionally associated with the legendary queen Medb. Ballinphull sits within that same landscape, which makes the presence of a cairn there entirely plausible, and quietly intriguing.
Beyond its existence and its location, the record for this particular cairn is, for the moment, largely silent. No excavation reports, no detailed measurements, no historical accounts have yet made their way into the public domain in any accessible form. It remains a monument whose story, if it has been investigated at all, is waiting to be told.