Carrowmore Tombs, County Sligo (Public Domain) |
The Sligo Neolithic Landscapes
Group has joined forces with Sligo County Council in making the case to
government to be nominated for UNESCO designation. The aim is for Sligo’s rich
Neolithic heritage to be afforded the same recognition and protection as
Skellig Michael and Brú na Bóinne which are already designated as World
Heritage Sites.
Dr Robert Hensey, chair of the
Sligo Neolithic Landscapes Group says that the monuments, including Queen
Maeve's Cairn and the megalithic cemeteries of Carrowmore and Carrowkeel have
few counterparts in the world. UNESCO World Heritage Site status would put
Sligo on the international stage, according to Dorothy Clarke, Director of
Services with Sligo County Council.
More than 6,000 years ago, the Neolithic
or Stone Age peoples of Western Europe began to build stone monuments over
their dead as tombs and ceremonial places. This was the beginning of what has
become known as the megalithic tradition of the Neolithic period.
Listoghil - Tomb 51 Carrowmore Megalithic Cemetery |
Carrowmore, Co. Sligo, is the
largest cemetery of megalithic tombs in Ireland and is also among the country’s
oldest, with dates ranging between 4,500 – 3,500 BC. Archaeologists have
recorded over sixty tombs of which some thirty are visible today. The oldest
tombs at Carrowmore were built more than 2,000 years before the pyramids of
Egypt. Carrowmore megalithic cemetery covers an area of about one square
kilometre. Most of the tombs have been
arranged in an oval-shaped layout and the entrances tend to face the central
part of the cemetery.
Archaeologists believe that the
earliest monuments were built by people who were mainly hunter-gatherers but
were turning to cattle breeding. The rich marine resources in this area made it
possible for people to settle down on the peninsula and develop a relatively
stable settlement pattern as hunter-gatherers, probably as early as 8,000 –
9,000 years ago (7,000 – 6,000 BC). Fishing, hunting for seal and other
mammals, and the gathering of shellfish contributed to the development of a
social structure normally found among farmers.
Listoghil Tomb Inner Chamber |
Carrowkeel Neolithic passage tomb
cemetery is situated in south County Sligo, near the village of Castlebaldwin. A
total of 14 tombs have been recorded in this cemetery. The tombs are between
5400 and 5100 years old (3400 to 3100 BC). Six more passage tombs are located
close by in what archaeologists call the Keshcorran complex.
Carrowkeel Megalithic Cemetery |
A common feature of Irish cairns is that the passage of one monument is frequently oriented to another prominent cairn, as well as the rising or setting position of the sun and moon. This occurs at several of the Carrowkeel cairns. For example, Cairn B opens towards Knocknarea and ruined Cairn M is oriented to Kesh Cairn.
Carrowkeel - Cairn G |
The Hut Sites
Nearby, at Mullaghfarna,
archaeologists have identified more than 150 small stone lined hollows with
entrance features which are believed to be Neolithic huts or enclosures. This
prehistoric village is likely to have been connected to the Carrowkeel cairns
and may have housed the workers who built the passage tombs, or perhaps their
descendants, who attended some ancient ritual there.
Knocknashee
Knocknashee Mountain showing two cairns Bing Image |
Archaeologists do not know what
ritual function, in addition to acting as burial places for the dead, the
passage tombs served for these cultures. A reverence for the sun is suggested
by the alignment of many of the passages to the rising or setting of the sun on
yearly solstice or equinox events.
It is known that the Megalithic
tradition died out about 5,000 years ago when it was at its peak. Well known
monuments such as Stonehenge, Newgrange, Knowth and Dowth, were all built
around this time.
Summary
County Sligo has a rich Neolithic
heritage stretching from Lough Gara with its crannogs in the south to
Creevykeel Court Tomb in the north. World Heritage Site status for the Knocknarea,
Carrowmore, Carrowkeel and Knocknashee complex of monuments would bring
significant benefits to the County, especially from a tourism perspective. It
would also in help to preserve and protect this unique Neolithic landscape for
future generations.
For further information see:
http://www.carrowkeel.com/index.html
https://www.blogger.com/blog/post/edit/7447788106874258351/5663729884492012271
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0dwfsrfvKo0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pn3PNFkRqJE