Barrow, Duntryleague, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Barrows
Some of the most intriguing archaeological sites in Ireland are the ones you cannot see at all.
In a stretch of reclaimed pasture just north of the R663 road in Duntryleague, County Limerick, there is thought to be a barrow, one of those low circular or oval mounds of earth and stone that were raised over prehistoric burials, sometimes singly and sometimes in loose clusters across a landscape. What makes this particular site quietly arresting is that it leaves almost no trace. No surface remains are visible on satellite imagery, the ground has long since been smoothed and grazed over, and it does not appear on any of the historic Ordnance Survey Ireland maps that have been recording Irish topography since the nineteenth century. The site exists, for now, chiefly as a possibility.
The case for something being here rests on two threads. A second possible barrow, recorded under the reference LI049-219----, sits roughly 85 metres to the northwest, and the clustering of such monuments in proximity to one another is not unusual in the Irish prehistoric record, where barrows often occur in loose funerary groupings rather than in isolation. More specifically, the site was catalogued as Duntryleague 12 by Eoin Grogan in his 1989 survey, a systematic attempt to document barrow monuments across the region. That listing gives the site a foothold in the archaeological record, even if the physical evidence on the ground has been lost to centuries of agricultural activity, most likely the draining and levelling that accompanied the conversion of rougher land into workable pasture.
For anyone making their way out to this part of County Limerick, the location is straightforward enough to find on the map, sitting immediately north of the R663, but there is no earthwork to stand beside or photograph. The value in visiting, if you are drawn to this kind of archaeology, is more contemplative than visual. The surrounding area of Duntryleague has other monuments, and the wider landscape repays slow attention. What survives of Duntryleague 12 is essentially an entry in a catalogue, a dot on a map, and the knowledge that the fields here may once have served a very different purpose.