Mound, Knockanbaun, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In a low-lying valley in County Sligo, where the Buncrowey River and the Easkey River meet roughly 150 metres to the north, there sits a grass-covered mound that is easy to overlook and difficult to explain.
It rises only half a metre or so from the surrounding pasture, yet its shape is oddly deliberate: a roughly square flat-topped platform, about six metres east to west and six and a half metres north to south, with a narrow arm, barely two metres wide, extending a further three metres northward from its north-eastern corner. The whole thing grades smoothly from its flat top into gentle sloping sides, and along the south-western and western scarp a slightly raised rim of small stones just barely protrudes through the sod, as though something more structural lies just beneath the surface.
What this mound actually is remains an open question. Its position is conspicuous in one sense: it occupies the valley floor at the confluence of two rivers, a location that in early Irish contexts often carried territorial or ceremonial significance. Confluences were liminal places, boundaries between one stretch of land and another, and mounds in such settings have in other parts of Ireland been associated with assembly sites, inauguration places, or burial monuments of various periods. The irregular shape here, with that projecting northern extension, sets it apart from the more symmetrical profile of a typical burial mound, but the stone rim visible at the western edge hints that it was not simply piled up from the surrounding soil. Whether it was raised for ritual, administrative, or some entirely practical purpose, the mound keeps its own counsel.
The site sits in ordinary farmland, bounded by two rivers and their meeting point, and the mound itself is low enough that a casual walker might cross the field without registering it at all. The slight rim of stones along its western face is the clearest visual cue that something was once done here with intention.