Barrow - mound barrow, Ballyouragan, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Barrows
A low earthen mound sitting in flat, wet pasture with poor views in every direction is not what most people picture when they imagine a prehistoric burial monument.
No dramatic hilltop, no commanding prospect across a valley. The mound barrow at Ballyouragan in County Limerick occupies a quietly unremarkable patch of agricultural land, and that plainness is, in its own way, rather curious. Whoever chose this spot did not choose it for spectacle.
Mound barrows are among the oldest human-made monuments in the Irish landscape, earthen mounds raised over burials during the Bronze Age or earlier, sometimes encircled by a fosse, which is a shallow surrounding ditch dug to provide material for the mound itself and to mark the boundary of the sacred space. The Ballyouragan example was first recorded cartographically on the 1897 edition of the Ordnance Survey 25-inch map, where it appears as a small scarped mound measuring roughly 13 metres north to south and 15 metres east to west. When the Archaeological Survey of Ireland inspected it in 2000, they found a roughly circular earthen mound with an internal diameter of about 10 metres, defined by a scarped edge and an external fosse around 9 metres wide. The mound is highest on its northern side, surviving there as a D-shaped form that tapers gently southward and more steeply to the north, with the fosse also better preserved on the northern arc. The site sits 600 metres northeast of the River Maigue and the townland boundary with Ballynahown, on the demesne lands historically associated with Caherass House, located about 625 metres to the southwest. A woodland plantation labelled Brickfield Wood on earlier Ordnance Survey maps lies just 20 metres to the west, and a ringfort sits only 85 metres to the south, suggesting this small corner of Limerick farmland has been in more or less continuous meaningful use across a very long stretch of time.
The mound is on private agricultural land, so access would require the landowner's permission. For those who want to get a sense of its form without setting foot on the pasture, the monument is clearly visible on Google Earth satellite imagery, with useful orthoimages from June 2018 and February 2020 showing its outline in the field. The winter image in particular, taken in February, reveals the earthwork's shape more legibly when vegetation is low. A sketch plan was surveyed and drawn by the Archaeological Survey of Ireland, and compiled by Edmond O'Donovan, uploaded in August 2020, giving a reliable record of the mound's current condition and dimensions for anyone wishing to study it further.