Barrow (Ring Barrow), Milltown, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Barrows
On a gentle rise in County Westmeath, a burial monument sits so quietly in the pasture that it is barely visible at ground level.
What survives is a ring-barrow, a prehistoric funerary form consisting of a low, flat-topped earthen mound enclosed by a shallow surrounding ditch, the whole arrangement signalling that someone of significance was once interred here, marked out from the ordinary ground by that circular boundary. The views across the surrounding countryside are reasonably wide from this spot, which may or may not have mattered to whoever chose the location, but it is a detail that makes the site feel deliberately placed rather than incidental.
What makes the arrangement particularly curious is that this ring-barrow does not stand alone. It sits within the eastern quadrant of a much larger enclosure, one that is sub-triangular in shape, an unusual outline given that most such enclosures tend toward the circular or oval. The relationship between the two features, the smaller burial monument nestled inside the greater earthwork, raises questions that the visible landscape cannot answer on its own. Whether the enclosure predates the barrow, postdates it, or was always intended to contain it is not recorded. Both features are catalogued under the same site complex, suggesting the two are understood as related, but the nature of that relationship remains open.
