Barrow - mound barrow, Kilmoyemoge, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Barrows
Somewhere above the Dawn River in County Waterford, a low, flat-topped mound sits on a bluff overlooking the water. It is scrub-covered now, and someone has gouged a quarry into its northern face, yet enough survives to make clear what it once was: a prehistoric burial mound, the kind raised over the dead in the centuries before written record, when earthworks marked both the landscape and the memory of those interred within them. At roughly fourteen metres across the base and no more than two and a half metres high, it is not a grand monument by any measure, but its position on the bluff, with the stream running some thirty metres to the south, suggests it was placed deliberately where it could be seen.
The mound was already being recorded as a circular feature on the Ordnance Survey's six-inch map of 1840, which means it had survived intact enough to catch a surveyor's eye nearly two centuries ago. What gives the site an added layer of interest is its proximity to the church of St. Dimóg, whose remains lie immediately to the north. The pairing of a prehistoric burial mound with an early Christian ecclesiastical site is not unusual in Ireland; early churches were frequently founded close to older sacred or ancestral monuments, sometimes absorbing their significance, sometimes simply tolerating their presence. Whether that dynamic was at work here is unknown, but the adjacency is striking. St. Dimóg is an obscure figure, and the church site itself is catalogued separately, yet together the two monuments suggest this quiet bluff above the Dawn River held some meaning across a very long stretch of time.

