Barrow (Ring Barrow), Craggycorradan, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Barrows
On a south-facing pasture slope in Craggycorradan, Co. Clare, a low earthwork sits quietly in the landscape, its circular form just legible enough to reward a careful eye.
What makes it quietly anomalous is its clustering: this possible ring-barrow, roughly twelve metres across in total, is not an isolated monument but one of at least three prehistoric funerary mounds within a few hundred metres of one another, suggesting that this particular patch of Clare was, at some point, a place people returned to repeatedly in order to bury or commemorate their dead.
A ring-barrow is a burial mound defined by a central raised mound set within a surrounding ditch, known as a fosse, and an outer earthen bank. The overall effect, seen from above or at ground level in low light, is a series of concentric rings pressed into the earth. This example is classed as a possible ring-barrow, meaning the form is suggestive but not definitively confirmed. It sits within a wider funerary landscape: a stepped barrow lies approximately 330 metres to the north-east, and a bowl-barrow, a simpler mound without the encircling fosse and bank, lies around 350 metres to the north. Such concentrations of barrow types are known elsewhere in Ireland and Britain, where prominent or symbolically significant ground attracted successive generations of monument-builders over long periods of prehistoric time.
The site sits in working pasture, so its outlines are best appreciated from aerial imagery, where the circular earthwork reads more clearly against the surrounding ground. At field level, the fosse and bank are subtle, and the central mound is modest in scale, so patience and ideally a low sun angle will help distinguish the earthwork from ordinary variations in the terrain.