Mound, Belpatrick, Co. Louth
Co. Louth |
Ritual/Ceremonial
A low earthen mound sitting on a broad ridge in Belpatrick, County Louth, does not immediately announce itself as anything remarkable.
It rises only about a metre above the surrounding ground, its flat top and subtly tapered plan giving it a deliberate, constructed quality that sets it apart from the natural rolls of the landscape. Higher ridges press in from the north, east, and south, meaning the mound occupies a kind of sheltered platform rather than a commanding height, which makes its positioning feel considered rather than incidental.
The mound runs roughly seventeen metres along its length, oriented north-north-west to south-south-east, and narrows slightly toward the northern end, from around six and a half metres wide at the southern end to just under five metres at the north. That sub-rectangular, flat-topped form is the detail that distinguishes it. Earthen mounds of this general type can serve a wide range of purposes across Irish prehistory and the medieval period, from burial monuments and ceremonial platforms to the foundations of early fortifications. Without excavation, it is not possible to say with certainty which category this one belongs to, and no such investigation appears to have taken place. A second recorded site sits approximately thirty-five metres to the north-west, suggesting that whatever activity shaped this corner of Louth, it was not confined to a single feature.