Burial mound, Pollacorragune, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Burial Sites
There is nothing to see at Pollacorragune.
The burial mound that once sat on the summit of an esker ridge, one of those long, winding gravel ridges left behind by retreating glaciers at the end of the last Ice Age, has left no visible surface trace whatsoever. The ground gives nothing away. And yet, beneath what is now an unremarkable stretch of County Galway, someone was buried with considerable care, their cremated remains placed inside an inverted cordoned urn, a type of decorated Bronze Age ceramic vessel, alongside a bronze razor and seven blue glass beads. Animal bones were scattered through the mound as well. The whole thing was built up in deliberate alternating layers of earth, stones, and gravel, a construction method that suggests ritual intention rather than hasty interment.
The mound was excavated in 1935, with findings published by Riley in 1936. It measured roughly 7.6 metres in diameter and stood about 1.2 metres high before excavation. The bronze razor is a detail worth pausing on; such objects appear with some regularity in Bronze Age burials across Ireland and Britain, and their inclusion alongside human remains has prompted considerable academic discussion about their symbolic role, whether connected to the preparation of the body, ideas of personal identity, or something else entirely that no longer translates. The blue glass beads point to a society with access to trade goods that travelled considerable distances. A comparable mound once stood approximately 200 metres to the south-east, suggesting this esker ridge held some sustained significance for the communities who buried their dead here, though that second mound has similarly vanished from the visible landscape.