Cairn, Castleruddery, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Cairns
On a gently sloping hillside at Castleruddery in County Wicklow, a rough circle of granite stones sits in a configuration that has puzzled those who have tried to classify it.
The feature spans roughly eighteen metres in diameter, and its purpose remains genuinely unresolved. When it was entered into the Record of Monuments and Places in 1986, the best available description was "hut sites, possible", a designation that says as much about the limits of the record as it does about the monument itself. A cairn, in general terms, is a deliberate accumulation of stones, often associated with burial or with marking a significant point in a landscape, though the term is used loosely for stone groupings that resist more precise identification.
What makes the site more curious is that it does not stand alone. A second unclassified cairn lies just twelve metres to the north, and a third sits roughly 140 metres to the north-north-east. The clustering suggests these features may be related, whether as part of a funerary landscape, a series of boundary markers, or something else entirely. The west-facing slope on which they sit looks out over a steeper drop, giving the location a quality of deliberate placement, though whether that was the intention of whoever arranged the stones is not something the current evidence can settle.