Barrow (Ring Barrow), Sraharla, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Barrows
On a north-facing pasture slope in Sraharla, County Cork, a shallow circular earthwork sits quietly in the grass, small enough that a person might walk past it without a second glance.
It measures just 2.6 metres across and is defined by a fosse, a shallow surrounding ditch, only ten centimetres deep and roughly 1.2 metres wide. That modest depression in the turf is, in all likelihood, the remnant of a ring barrow, a type of prehistoric funerary monument in which a burial was enclosed within a circular bank and ditch. The scale here is intimate rather than imposing, which may be part of why it has attracted so little attention.
What makes the site more quietly interesting is that it does not stand alone. Two other possible ring barrows lie adjacent to it on the same slope, forming a small cluster of related monuments. Such groupings are not unusual in the Irish landscape; they suggest that a particular place held repeated or sustained significance for the communities who buried their dead there, though the precise period and the people involved remain unspecified in what is currently known about this site. Ring barrows as a class span a broad stretch of prehistory, appearing from the Bronze Age onward, and their presence in the Cork countryside is relatively well documented even where individual examples are as slight as this one.