Barrow (Ring Barrow), Doonasleen, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Barrows
A low circular earthwork sits in level pasture at Doonasleen, visible from a distance and itself commanding an open view in every direction.
What makes it quietly arresting is not its scale but its layered identity: a prehistoric ring barrow, the kind of monument typically raised over the burial of an individual of some importance during the Bronze Age, which in living memory was also known locally as a children's burial ground. Two different burial traditions, separated by millennia, appear to have converged on the same patch of North Cork farmland.
The monument itself is modest in its dimensions but coherent in its form. A roughly circular enclosure measuring approximately 14.3 metres north to south and 15.3 metres east to west is defined by a fosse, a shallow ditch cut into the ground, with a bank built up from the spoil on its outer edge. The bank stands roughly 0.7 metres above the exterior ground level and a little more on its inner face. Two causeways break the circuit, one facing east at three metres wide and a narrower one facing west-south-west, suggesting deliberate, planned access rather than later disturbance. The association with children's burial is significant in a wider Irish context. Sites known as cillíní, informal, unconsecrated burial grounds used for unbaptised infants and others excluded from church graveyards, were often located at ancient earthworks or liminal landscape features. Whether that practice extended here in any organised way is unrecorded, but the local memory of it places this unassuming ring of earth within a long and sometimes sorrowful continuum of use.