Barrow (Ring Barrow), Knockainy West, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Barrows
A low circular mound in the fields of Knockainy West holds the kind of quiet strangeness that is easy to walk past without quite understanding what you are looking at.
This is a ring barrow, a prehistoric burial monument type found across Ireland, in which a rounded earthen mound is defined and set apart by a surrounding ditch and bank. What makes this particular example worth pausing over is its unusual topographical situation: rather than sitting proud on a ridge or hillside as many barrows do, it sits within a depression, with its enclosing earthworks forming a counterscarp bank, meaning an outer raised bank beyond the ditch, that wraps around it at a diameter of roughly three metres across.
The monument was formally described in 2004 by Condit and Coyne, who recorded the mound as circular, approximately fifteen metres in diameter, and enclosed by a shallow ditch one metre wide. That ditch in turn sits inside the counterscarp bank, the whole arrangement forming a sequence of concentric earthen features. Ring barrows in Ireland are generally associated with the Bronze Age or early Iron Age, used for the burial of the dead, though the specific date and use of this Knockainy West example are not recorded in the available sources. An aerial photograph taken in September 2002 as part of the Archaeological Survey of Ireland, reference ASIAP 303/26, documents the monument from above, giving a clearer sense of the concentric geometry that is harder to read from ground level.
The monument lies in County Limerick, in the townland of Knockainy West, a rural area where the landscape offers few obvious landmarks to orient a visitor. Ground-level visibility of such earthworks can be limited, particularly during the summer months when vegetation is high; late autumn or winter, when growth has died back, tends to give the clearest view of the earthen features. The aerial record suggests the concentric structure is best appreciated from above or in low-raking light, when shadows pick out the slight differences in ground level. As with most field monuments, the site sits within agricultural land, so any visit should be undertaken with awareness of access arrangements and with care not to disturb the surrounding ground.