Urn burial, Cush, Co. Limerick

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Burial Sites

Urn burial, Cush, Co. Limerick

An urn placed mouth upwards, filled with cremated bones, some of which had simply spilled over the rim and settled into the earth around it.

No protective stone, no careful capping slab, just a ceramic vessel set into a hollow amid charcoal and reddish soil. That is how excavators found Burial No. I at Cush, County Limerick, and the plainness of it is quietly arresting. Someone had placed human remains in this way deliberately, and then the ground closed over it for centuries.

The burial was one of four urn and cist interments, a cist being a small stone-lined grave box, found in the western half of a bivallate ringfort at Cush. A bivallate ringfort is one enclosed by two concentric banks and ditches rather than one, which generally signals higher status or a need for greater defence. The excavations were carried out between 1934 and 1935 by Seán P. Ó Ríordáin, whose published account from 1940 remains the primary record of the site. Ó Ríordáin described the deposit with careful precision: an irregular pocket within reddish fill, surrounded by charcoal, the urn unprotected and upright, the bones both inside and overflowing it. The association of cremated remains with ringfort interiors is not unusual in Irish archaeology, where earlier Bronze Age burials were sometimes incorporated into or overlain by later settlement features, suggesting the landscape carried layers of use and meaning across long stretches of time.

Cush is a townland in County Limerick, and the ringfort complex there is a recorded monument. Visitors with an interest in early Irish archaeology will find the site sits within a rural landscape where access requires attention to local field boundaries and landowner permissions, as is typical for earthwork monuments of this kind. The features visible above ground are the earthwork enclosures themselves rather than any trace of the burials, which were fully excavated. Anyone wanting to engage seriously with the site would do well to consult Ó Ríordáin's 1940 publication beforehand, which includes plans and photographs that give a clearer sense of the spatial relationships between the burials and the wider enclosure.

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