Barrow, Banagher, Co. Cavan
Co. Cavan |
Barrows
What looks at first glance like a gentle unevenness in an ordinary Cavan pasture turns out, on closer inspection, to be the flattened remains of a prehistoric burial mound, one of at least five related monuments clustered within a roughly 150 by 130 metre patch of elevated ground near Banagher.
The mound itself is modest in its current state: a low circular form with an internal diameter of around 6.2 metres and a surviving height of just 0.27 metres, enclosed by a heavily degraded earthen bank. A barrow of this type would originally have served as a funerary monument, likely raised over a burial or series of burials during the Bronze Age or earlier, with the surrounding bank and the faint trace of an internal fosse, a shallow ditch dug between the mound and its enclosing bank, forming a boundary between the world of the living and the interred dead. The original entrance to the enclosure is no longer identifiable. Time, agricultural activity, and the slow compression of centuries have reduced something once deliberately conspicuous to something that now asks careful attention to be seen at all. The whole complex sits on uneven elevated pasture, overlooked from the north-west by Slieve Glah, a hill that would have formed a significant landmark in the wider ritual landscape of this part of County Cavan. That these monuments were grouped together rather than scattered suggests the area held sustained ceremonial importance, not a single act of burial but a place returned to across generations.