Loughcrew

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Loughcrew in the snow

Loughcrew (Irish: Loch Craobh) is a major megalithic burial complex near Oldcastle in Meath; one of the most important in Ireland.

Loughcrew (or 'Lough Crew') is a site of considerable historical importance in Ireland. It is the site of megalithic burial grounds dating back to approximately 3500 and 3300 BC, situated near the summit of Slieve na Calliagh and on surrounding hills and valleys. Passage tombs on the site are aligned with the Equinox sunrise.

Location

The site is to be found in the north-west of Meath, on and around Slieve na Calliagh.

The Loughcrew Passage Tombs

From the summit of Sliabh na Caillí at Loughcrew

Loughcrew is one of the four main passage tomb sites in Ireland; the others being Brú na Bóinne, also in Meath, and Carrowkeel and Carrowmore) in County Sligo. No comprehensive dating programme has been conducted there, but the monuments are estimated to date from about 3300 BC. The sites consist of cruciform chambers covered in most instances by a mound. A unique style of megalithic petroglyphs are seen there, including lozenge shapes, leaf shapes, as well as circles, some surrounded by radiating lines.[1]

Petroglyphs inside cairn T

The site is spread across three hilltops, Carnbane East, Carnbane West, and Patrickstown. The Irish name for the site is Sliabh na Caillí, which means "mountain of the hag". Legend has it that the monuments were created when a giant hag, striding across the land, dropped her cargo of large stones from her apron. The orthostats and structural stones of the monuments tend to be from local green gritstone, which was soft enough to carve, but which is also vulnerable to vandalism. There is no evidence in the rocks of percussion fracturing from being dropped from the apron of a giant witch.

In 1980 Irish-American researcher Martin Brennan discovered that Cairn T in Carnbane East is directed to receive the beams of the rising sun on the spring and autumnal equinox - the light shining down the passage and illuminating the art on the backstone.[2][3] Brennan also discovered alignments in Cairn L (53°44’36"N, 7°8’3"W), Knowth, and Dowth in the Boyne Valley. The Cairn T alignment is similar to the well-known illumination at the passage tomb at Brú na Bóinne (Newgrange), which is aligned to catch the rays of the winter solstice sunrise.

There are about twenty-three tombs in the Loughcrew complex in addition to Cairn L and Cairn T, along with additional archaeological sites.

Modern history

In more recent centuries Loughcrew became the seat of a branch of the Norman-Irish Plunkett family. The family church stands in the grounds of Loughcrew Gardens. With its barren isolated location, Sliabh na Caillí became a critical meeting point throughout the Penal Laws for Roman Catholics. Even though the woods are now gone an excellent example of a Mass Rock can still be seen on the top of Sliabh na Caillí today. The Plunketts were involved in running the Irish Confederacy of the 1640s and were dispossessed in the Cromwellian Settlement of 1652. Their estate at Loughcrew was assigned by Sir William Petty to the Naper Family c. 1655. The Napers are descended from Sir Robert Napier who was Chief Baron of the Exchequer of Ireland in 1593.[4]

The Napers built an extensive estate of some 180,000 acres (730 km²) in northern Meath in the subsequent centuries which mirrored that developed by their neighbouring Cromwellians, the Taylors of Headfort. Following a third and devastating fire, in 1964, the three Naper sons went to court and requested that the state allow the family trust to be broken up and the estate divided between the three sons. Subsequently the house and gardens have been restored by Charles and Emily Naper, who open the gardens and run an annual opera festival.[5]

The "Birdman" mystery

On 9th January 2018, while doing construction work in Loughcrew Gardens, workmen unearthed a stone statue roughly 6 foot in height. The statue of a male figure has his arms folded and his face has a long beak-like appendage.

Footage of the discovery was recorded by the workmen and shared on social media.[6]

The statue, dubbed "The Birdman of Loughcrew", is of unknown origin and has been investigated by the Department of the Environment.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Loughcrew)

References

  1. photos of megalithic art in Cairn T from knowth.com
  2. Documented in photos and videos taken on site for six years in a row
  3. Brennan, Martin, The Stars and the Stones: Ancient Art and Astronomy in Ireland - Thames and Hudson (1983); later re-published as The Stones of Time (1996).
  4. Bunbury, Turtle: 'Loughcrew House, Co. Meath - Gilded Magnificence' (2003, 2006)
  5. Lyttelton, Celia (May 2009) "Interiors: aria condition," Telegraph, UK.
  6. "Meath Chronicle - VIDEO: Workmen have unearthed something incredible at Loughcrew" (in en). Meath Chronicle. http://www.meathchronicle.ie/news/roundup/articles/2018/01/10/4150552-video-workmen-have-unearthed-something-incredible-at-loughcrew/. Retrieved 2018-01-12.