Barrow, Ballynagally, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Barrows
There is a monument in Ballynagally, County Limerick, that you cannot see.
It sits in low-lying, wet pasture, leaves no mark on the ground that any visitor could point to, and has never appeared on Ordnance Survey historic maps. What it does have is a single aerial photograph, taken in 1986, that suggests something circular once existed here, faint enough in the soil to escape notice for centuries and faint enough now that even satellite imagery cannot confirm it.
The site was identified during a Bruff aerial photographic survey in 1986, recorded as image Bruff 5 (AP 4/3666), which flagged it as a possible ring-barrow. A ring-barrow is a prehistoric burial monument, typically a low earthen mound surrounded by a circular ditch or bank, and they are known from across Ireland, usually dating to the Bronze Age or Early Iron Age. The classification here is tentative, and that tentativeness matters. A second possible barrow has been recorded roughly 15 metres to the south-west, and cultivation ridges, the long parallel earthworks left by historic lazy-bed farming, lie approximately 150 metres to the east. The site sits 140 metres north of a watercourse that marks the townland boundary with Scart. By the time orthophotography was carried out between 2005 and 2012, and again on Google Earth imagery reviewed subsequently, no surface remains were visible at all. The record was compiled by Martin Fitzpatrick and uploaded in April 2021.
Access to the field itself would require landowner permission, and in any practical sense there is nothing to see on the ground. The surrounding pasture is described as low-lying and wet, which gives some sense of the conditions underfoot in all but the driest months. The value of coming here, if one were inclined, is less about what is visible and more about what the landscape implies: a cluster of possible prehistoric features in ordinary farmland, none of them certain, all of them legible only from the air and only under the right light. That the 1986 photograph captured something at all is the anomaly worth sitting with.