Megalithic tomb - court tomb, Fahy, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Megalithic Tombs
In the townland of Fahy in County Galway, there survives a court tomb, one of Ireland's oldest monument types, dating in general to the Neolithic period, roughly four to six thousand years ago.
Court tombs take their name from the open, usually semicircular or oval forecourt that fronts the burial gallery, a space thought to have served a ceremonial function for the communities that built and used them. They are concentrated mainly in the northern half of Ireland, which makes any example in Connacht of some geographical interest, sitting as it does towards the southern edge of the form's typical distribution.
Court tombs were communal burial monuments, built not for a single individual but for the repeated interment of the dead over generations. The effort involved in their construction, large upright stones supporting roofing slabs, the whole originally mounded over with cairn material, points to organised communities with strong beliefs about the treatment of the dead and the marking of landscape. The Fahy example belongs to this long tradition, a physical remnant of early farming societies who shaped the Irish countryside long before the arrival of metal tools or written record.
