Barrow (Ring Barrow), Turraheen, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Barrows
On a stretch of upland grassland in Turraheen, County Tipperary, a low circular earthwork sits quietly in the landscape, easy to miss and easy to underestimate.
It measures just under thirteen metres across at its widest point, rises no more than a few centimetres above the surrounding ground, and has stood here, largely undisturbed, for thousands of years. The flatness of it is part of what makes it strange. There is no dramatic mound, no obvious focal point, just a carefully engineered geometry pressed into the earth.
This is a ring-barrow, a form of funerary monument associated broadly with the Bronze Age in Ireland, though examples span a considerable range of periods. The type is defined by its structure rather than its contents: a central platform or mound, here four metres in diameter and nearly flat-topped, surrounded by a fosse (a cut ditch) and then an outer enclosing bank. At Turraheen, the inner fosse retains a base width of one and a half metres and the outer bank extends to four metres at its base, giving the whole monument a layered, concentric profile when viewed from above. The platform itself stands only about twenty centimetres proud of the fosse floor, which means the visual effect at ground level is subtle, almost domestic in scale. What survives here is described as well-preserved, which, for a monument of this age on partially reclaimed agricultural land, is quietly remarkable. The upland setting, with open views to the east, suggests the location was deliberately chosen, as was often the case with prehistoric burial sites, where orientation and visibility across the landscape seem to have carried meaning.