Cloghabracka, Belville, Co. Sligo

Co. Sligo |

Megalithic Tombs

Cloghabracka, Belville, Co. Sligo

County Sligo has long been associated with megalithic monuments, and the townland of Cloghabracka near Belville holds one such ancient structure documented in the broader tradition of megalithic tomb building that shaped the Irish landscape during the Neolithic period.

These tombs, built roughly five thousand years ago, were communal burial monuments constructed from large upright stones capped with massive horizontal slabs, and they remain among the most enduring physical traces of prehistoric communities in Ireland.

The site at Cloghabracka is recorded in Seán Ó Nualláin's authoritative Survey of the Megalithic Tombs of Ireland, Volume V, which covers County Sligo and was published by the Stationery Office in Dublin in 1989. Ó Nualláin's survey remains a foundational work for understanding the distribution and condition of megalithic monuments across Sligo, a county unusually well furnished with such remains. The name Cloghabracka itself is worth a moment's attention: townland names in Ireland frequently preserve traces of older Irish-language descriptions of the landscape, and "clogh" derives from "cloch", meaning stone, suggesting the monument may have given the place its name rather than the other way around.

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