Burial mound, Lackabaun, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Burial Sites
In the townland of Lackabaun in County Kerry, a burial mound sits in the landscape, carrying the accumulated silence of prehistoric interment.
Burial mounds of this kind, raised earthen monuments constructed to cover the remains of the dead, were built across Ireland from the Neolithic period onwards, often sited with deliberate attention to the surrounding terrain. They were not incidental features but statements, visible markers of ancestry and territory that shaped how communities understood the land around them.
Lackabaun, whose name derives from the Irish leath cabhán, meaning half or grey hollow, is a Kerry townland whose archaeological record remains, for now, incompletely documented in the public domain. Without further detail currently available, the mound's date, dimensions, and excavation history cannot be reliably stated. What can be said is that Kerry as a county holds an extraordinary density of prehistoric monuments, and burial mounds in this region frequently date to the Bronze Age, roughly 2500 to 500 BC, a period when such funerary architecture was widespread across the island. Some mounds in Kerry cover simple pit burials; others contain stone-lined cist graves or the cremated remains of multiple individuals deposited over generations.
