Barrow - embanked barrow, Carrowpadeen, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Barrows
In a level field at Carrowpadeen in County Sligo, there is a circular patch of raised ground that most people would walk past without a second glance.
Thirteen metres across, it sits just slightly above the surrounding pasture, ringed by a low, broad earthen bank that is wide enough to be noticeable up close but not dramatic enough to announce itself from a distance. What makes it worth pausing over is precisely its understatement: this is an embanked barrow, a prehistoric burial monument, and it has been quietly occupying this field for thousands of years.
Embanked barrows are a type of funerary earthwork in which a mound or raised area is encircled by a bank, sometimes accompanied by a fosse, or external ditch, cut into the ground around the outside. Here, no fosse is visible at ground level, and the bank itself is incomplete: along the arc running from west-northwest through north to north-northeast, it is absent entirely. Whether that gap represents an original entrance, later erosion, or some deliberate feature of the monument's design is no longer clear. The bank where it does survive measures nearly seven metres wide but only about thirty centimetres in interior height, giving the whole structure a flattened, worn-down appearance that speaks to considerable age and the slow pressure of agricultural use over many centuries. The original entrance, if it ever took a distinct form, is no longer recognisable.