Barrow (Ring Barrow), Ballyphilip, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Barrows
For generations, the low-lying pasture at Ballyphilip in County Limerick showed no obvious sign of what lay beneath.
No marker on the Ordnance Survey's historic maps, no folktale attached to a mound, nothing to interrupt the flat, damp fields cut through by land drains and narrow watercourses. The site exists in a kind of cartographic silence, which makes its eventual identification all the more curious. What is now recognised as a ring-barrow, a circular earthwork of the kind typically associated with Bronze Age burial practice, simply went unrecorded by mapmakers for as long as records were kept.
The monument only came to wider attention in 1986, when the Bruff aerial photographic survey captured what appeared to be a circular cropmark at the site, catalogued as Bruff 15602 (AP 4/3665). Cropmarks of this kind appear when buried features affect the growth of grass or grain above them, producing subtle differences in colour or height that are invisible at ground level but legible from the air, especially in dry conditions when buried ditches retain more moisture than the surrounding soil. Subsequent ortho-imagery, including an OSi survey taken between 2005 and 2012, confirmed the earthwork more clearly, showing a circular form roughly ten metres in diameter. A Google Earth image from March 2017 provided further confirmation. The barrow is not isolated; it sits conjoined to a second ring-barrow immediately to the south-east, and both are part of a larger complex of similar monuments in the area, suggesting this was once a significant landscape of the dead, where burials were grouped together over time. The site record was compiled by Alison McQueen and Vera Rahilly and uploaded to the national monuments database in September 2020.
Access to the monument itself is limited by the nature of the terrain. The surrounding pasture is wet and intersected by drainage channels, so the ground underfoot can be difficult, particularly in winter or after prolonged rain. The earthwork, at ten metres across, is modest in scale and unlikely to announce itself dramatically from a distance. What a careful observer might notice is a low circular rise in the field surface, subtle enough to be overlooked entirely without prior knowledge of where to look. The aerial images held in the national monuments record remain the clearest way to appreciate the monument's form and its relationship to the adjoining barrow to the south-east.
