Barrow (Ring Barrow), Cappagh, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Barrows
In the townland of Cappagh in County Mayo, a ring barrow sits in the landscape, circular and deliberate, a form of prehistoric funerary monument that has quietly outlasted almost everything built since.
Ring barrows are low earthen mounds encircled by a ditch and an outer bank, constructed during the Bronze Age as burial monuments for the dead, though their exact ritual purposes varied and are still debated. This one at Cappagh is among the many such sites scattered across the west of Ireland, easy to overlook from a distance, easier still to walk past without recognising what the gentle rise and surrounding depression actually represent.
The monument belongs to a tradition of burial practice that stretches back roughly four thousand years, to a period when communities marked death and remembrance through earthworks rather than stone chambers. Ring barrows are distinct from the larger passage tombs of the Neolithic, being generally smaller, later in date, and more widely distributed across the Irish countryside. Mayo is well populated with prehistoric monuments of various kinds, a reflection of how intensively the region was farmed and settled in prehistory, before blanket bog spread across much of the upland terrain and preserved, by accident, what later centuries might otherwise have destroyed. The specific history of the Cappagh example, including when it was first recorded, what if anything has been found in or near it, and how well it has survived, remains undocumented in publicly available sources at present.