Cairn, Ballynafullia, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Cairns
On a south-west-facing slope of rough hill pasture in County Kerry, nine cairns are scattered across the ground above the valley of the Dromoghty River.
That number is what makes this spot quietly striking. A single prehistoric cairn is unremarkable enough in the Irish uplands, but a cluster of nine arranged across the same hillside suggests something more deliberate, more sustained, perhaps a landscape of burial or memory that accumulated over generations rather than being placed all at once.
The cairn in question is modest in scale, roughly 3.7 metres in diameter and 0.8 metres high, a low mound of loose stones now largely grassed over. Cairns of this type are among the oldest human-made features in the Irish landscape, typically associated with Bronze Age or earlier burial practice, though not every cairn contains a burial. What remains visible here, apart from the mound itself, are traces of kerbing along the east to south-east arc. Kerbstones are the upright or pitched stones that once defined the outer edge of a cairn, giving it a cleaner boundary and holding the cairn material in place. Their partial survival here hints at a more formal original construction than the current grass-covered appearance might suggest. The nearest of the nine cairns in the group lies approximately 40 metres to the south, close enough that the relationship between them would have been obvious to anyone moving through this part of the hillside in antiquity.