Barrow (Ring Barrow), Galboola, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Barrows
A field in County Limerick holds five prehistoric burial mounds arranged in a line, spaced roughly six metres apart, and yet for most of modern history not one of them appeared on an Ordnance Survey map.
That absence is part of what makes this cluster of ring-barrows in Galboola quietly remarkable. They sat in undulating pasture, facing south-west toward the townland boundary with Rootiagh, unrecorded in any official cartographic record until aerial photography began to catch what ground-level observation had missed.
A ring-barrow is, in essence, a low circular burial mound ringed by a ditch and sometimes an outer bank, typically dating to the Bronze Age or early Iron Age. The five examples at Galboola form a linear cluster orientated roughly along a north-west to south-east axis, and the particular mound recorded as LI023-236002 sits approximately fifteen metres north-east of the Rootiagh townland boundary. It measures around 6.5 metres in external diameter. The group was first formally identified during the Bruff aerial photographic survey in 1986, captured under reference Bruff 23702 and aerial photograph AP 4/3634. Despite that identification, the sites remained absent from historic Ordnance Survey Ireland mapping, and it was only through orthoimage analysis, conducted between 2005 and 2012, that they became faintly traceable on official record. Google Earth imagery from March 2017 confirmed their visibility, though a later image from June 2018 showed noticeably denser vegetation cover over the same ground, a reminder of how quickly pasture can obscure what archaeology has only recently found. The record was compiled by Edmond O'Donovan and uploaded in September 2020.
Because these sites lie on private agricultural land, access is not straightforward, and there is no formal path or signage. The monuments are most legible from the air or through satellite imagery rather than at ground level, where the low earthworks can be difficult to distinguish from natural undulation in the pasture. Anyone with a serious interest in visiting should make enquiries locally and seek landowner permission. The spring months, before vegetation thickens, offer the best conditions for spotting the subtle rises in the grass that mark each mound. The linear arrangement of the five barrows is the detail worth looking for, since that deliberate spacing and alignment suggests the site was planned as a whole rather than accumulated gradually, which is itself an unusual characteristic among similar monuments in the region.