Cairn, Knockanree, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Cairns
On a low ridge at Knockanree in County Wicklow, a small cairn sits on level ground, its modest scale giving little away about what was once concealed inside it.
In 1933, a cist was uncovered there, a type of small stone-lined burial box, built from four upright slabs and sealed with a capstone, measuring roughly 43 by 30 centimetres. Inside was a food vessel, a type of decorated ceramic pot commonly placed with the dead during the Early Bronze Age, typically thought to accompany the deceased as an offering or provision for the afterlife. The find was compact and quiet, the kind of discovery that does not make headlines but carries real weight once you understand what it represents.
What makes the site a little stranger is that the cist was not found in isolation. It lay within a rectangular enclosure that had already been recorded on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1838, meaning the outline of this ancient feature was being noted and mapped nearly a century before anyone understood what it contained. References to the site appear in Dargan's writing from 1916 and later in Waddell's 1990 survey, suggesting it was known to antiquarians for some time before the cist came to light. The cairn that survives today still carries traces of stone facing along its edges, and it may represent part of that earlier enclosure rather than a wholly separate construction. The relationship between the cairn, the enclosure, and the cist remains somewhat ambiguous, which is part of what gives the place its quietly unresolved character.