Europe Overview 

Horseback riding tours

Rides in Ireland

Ireland Intro

Atlantic to Markree Castle
Markree Castle Getaway

Connemara Trail

Coast Trail - Connemara

Ring of Kerry Ride
Donegal South
Yeats Trail Getaway

 

Riding Centers:

Castle Leslie Center
Offaly Riding Center
Improve your Jumping

 

Winter - Hunts:

Cross Country Escape

 

Travel Info

Non riding tours in Ireland:

Walking & Biking

Sign up for newsletter

Carrowmore, County Sligo.

Carrowmore Megalithic Cemetery
Carrowmore, Sligo .

The megalithic cemetery at Carrowmore is part of an extensive megalithic landscape located close to Sligo town on the Cúil Irra peninsula which is dominated by the cairn of warrior Queen Maeve (Misgán Méadbha) on the summit of Knocknarea Mountain, near Strandhill, County Sligo.

Situated in a dramatic setting overlooking Sligo Harbour and Ballisodare Bay, Carrowmore Cemetery is the largest of the most important Megalithic Sites in Europe with a variety of chambered cairns, passage mounds, dolmens, standing stones and stone circles.

Description

Distributed over many acres and extending into adjoining townlands, Carrowmore represents the largest grouping of megalithic monuments in Ireland, and immense Neolithic burial ground where once there may have been more than a hundred tombs. Casual exploration in the last century and present day gravel quarrying in the vicinity have devalued the archaeological potential of the site; but it is still a rewarding place to visit, steeped in atmosphere and evoking a sense of the past. The surviving monuments, some much more despoiled than others, comprise truncated passage tombs whose megalithic character derives from the huge ice-transported erratics used in the construction of the chambers. The equally massive kerbs of vanished cairns are sometimes mistaken for ritual stone circles, which they resemble. A number of the tombs here have lately been the subject of controversial dating by a team of Swedish archaeologists, whose findings suggest that they may have been built before 400 BC. To the north-west of The Carrowmore group rises the prominent hump of Knocknarea (1,014 feet), a cairn-crowned hill traditionally held to be the burial place of Queen Maeve of Connacht. The colossal cairn, 35 feet high and 200 feet across at the base, is much before her assigned period in the annals and illustrates the way in which folklore compresses time to accord with legend. Its setting and general appearance indicate a passage-tomb, though it has never been opened. To appreciate what Carrowmore may have looked like originally, one must visualise this undulating countryside without modern houses, field-fences, roads and the pock-marks of gravel workings. The hundred or so monuments dotted over this green landscape would have been more conspicuous then, many of them clearly seen from a single viewpoint as they were doubtless intended to be, a great necropolis spread out below Knocknarea, whose elevated cairn perhaps provided a focus for the tomb builders.

Location
Situated 5km southwest of Sligo Town Centre.

Opening Times
May - September: 09.30 - 18.30 hrs daily Last admission 45 minutes before closing.
 

Home    Reservation    Specials    Brochure    Contact Us    All Trips    Trip Finder

© 2005 Hidden Trails, Ltd. All rights reserved.

 
| Top |