Barrow, Knockmeelmore, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Barrows
On a gentle south-east-facing slope in Knockmeelmore, County Waterford, a low earthen mound sits so quietly in the landscape that it could pass for a natural rise in the ground. It is barely half a metre high and around fifteen metres across, its flat top long since swallowed by vegetation. What makes it worth a second look is what surrounds it: a concentric arrangement of ditches and berms, the kind of layered earthwork geometry that signals deliberate, ancient intent.
A barrow is a prehistoric burial mound, typically raised over the remains of the dead during the Bronze Age or earlier, and this example at Knockmeelmore follows the form known as a ring-barrow, where the central mound is encircled by one or more ditches. Here, the mound is separated from a wet, flat-bottomed inner fosse, a ditch roughly four metres wide and up to forty centimetres deep, by a grass-covered berm of about eight and a half metres. Beyond that, a second berm of around eleven metres leads to a slight outer fosse, which runs from the north-east to the south-east and reaches a maximum depth of half a metre. The full extent of this outer ditch, stretching to a diameter of roughly sixty-five metres, is visible only from above, recorded on vertical aerial photographs. The site sits within a slight basin, with the head of an east-west stream about a hundred metres to the south and higher ground closing in on most sides, leaving only the west relatively open. That topographical setting, sheltered but not hidden, is characteristic of many prehistoric funerary monuments, which were often placed in relation to water sources and natural boundaries.