Road - road/trackway, Barnagowlane, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Roads & Tracks
In the townland of Barnagowlane in County Cork, a road or trackway has been deemed significant enough to merit formal recognition as an archaeological monument.
That designation alone raises quiet questions. Ancient roads and trackways in Ireland range from the grand timber causeways of the midland bogs, some dating back thousands of years, to the more modest drove roads and pilgrim paths worn into hillsides over centuries of use. The fact that a particular route in this corner of Cork has been catalogued alongside ringforts, standing stones, and enclosures suggests it preserves something beyond the ordinary memory of a landscape.
Barnagowlane is a small rural townland, and the precise character of this trackway, its date, its construction, and the story of who used it and why, remains difficult to establish from what is currently available. What can be said is that designated road monuments in Ireland tend to reflect one of several possibilities: a paved or metalled surface of some antiquity, a route associated with early ecclesiastical or ritual movement, or a pathway whose alignment or construction marks it out as pre-modern in origin. Without further detail, the trackway at Barnagowlane sits in the company of these possibilities, waiting for fuller documentation to clarify its place among them.