Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Loughcrew Tombs, 1

On a ridge of hills some miles west of Bru na Boinne, but still in County Meath, are the Loughcrew Tombs, another of Ireland's 3 or 4 great megalithic centers. The tombs appear to me about midway in age between Carrowmore and Bru na Boinne: smaller undertakings, still passage tombs, often with a dolmen surrounded by a ring, but interestingly carved, and therefore more like their eastern neighbors than those to the west. Cairn T on Carnbane Hill East, is the largest specimen. It's a bit of a trudge climbing up to it, but it is more than rewarding. There are few people willing to make this trip, and you can easily have the place to yourself. OPW staff are helpful but more than willing to stay in their hut out of the fierce wind.















Carin T and a small ring neighbor to the left
















The nice OPW ladies will let you borrow a torch if you forgot yours



























Corballed ceiling, just like at Newgrange







Bru na Boinne, 2016: Knowth

We also visited Knowth in 2009, but did not post much. So here is a fraction of the megalithic art there, nearly all of it on the kerbs.
Knowth and two its satellites

Again, it's the very large curb stones that present the "art"

Here are just a few...there are a couple score, I guess, Knowth by far the major
concentration of megalithic art so far discovered




The environs





More rocks





The "sun dial" stone


Now inside the great tomb, looking at a side view

Comparison of Newgrange, Knowth, and Dowth

Knowth has the longest of all known megalithic corridors; interestingly, to me,
it is oriented toward the equinoxes, not the solstices, so that the sunrise of the
vernal equinox comes in one entrance, and the sunset of the autumnal equinox
comes in the other; so why the equinoxes? you ask...well, I guess, they didn't
have the Farmer's Almanac back then, and, especially if you were a novice
farmer, which everyone was, it would be good to know when to sow, when to
reap; I guess

Newgrange not far away

More rocks

More satellites

Special among the special places

Bru na Boinne, 2016: Newgrange

The bend in the River Boinne, County Meath, encloses one of the half dozen greatest of megalithic centers in the world, with Newgrange, Knowth, Dowth, and scores of satellite structures. More than half of the megalithic art so far known resides within this bend. We visited in 2009, and I posted a brief account, http://roadeveron.blogspot.co.uk/2009/05/bru-na-boinne.html, which I can not improve upon, except by quantity of pix.
Newgrange at a distance, driving by; the white facing is quartz, from the
Wicklow Mountains, 50 miles away; must have been valued for something...
perhaps its luminescence...Newgrange is all about the sun...


















Bru na Boinne, then bend of the river Boyne (chartered helicopter view)

















The River Boyne
















In the museum, home sweet home, Ireland in the neolithic, 5,000-6,000 years ago

















4-seater
















Neolithic toy




















How to move megaliths...at Newgrange, they were probably floated down the river
on rafts, from a site miles away; then schlepped up the hill on log rollers; imagine
the work involved in just felling the trees and shaping the logs, using only stone tools...



















"Symbols" found in megalithic "art"; no Rosetta Stone found as yet

















After the bus ride, the front exterior of Newgrange, with the quartz and the giant
curb stones; also after the tour (no fotos) of the passage way and cruciform chamber,
and demonstration of how the roof box directs sunlight, at sunrise on winter solstice,
down the passage way to the chamber and the ashes of the dead; so imagine how
you would calculate that 6,000 years ago...




















Vicki beside one of the decorated curbstones at Newgrange; rather more of them
occur at Knowth, next hill over

















The entry stone (said to be the most photographed megalith in the world), the
entrance, and the roof box



















We hope to be spending winter solstice 2016 in Ireland; but we'll
be home for Xmas

Sunday, July 10, 2016

Proleek Dolmen

The Proleek Dolmen is one of Ireland's best known and largest. Interestingly, it is located on what is now a fashionable golf course and resort, but the signage is good, and determined megalith hunters can find it with little difficulty.
Little remains of the great house that once anchored this
demesne...
































Nice grounds though
















And rose garden
















The signage was indeed good




But you still had to run a golf ball gauntlet



























Finally, the allee couverte that accompanies the dolmen
















Fellow megalith hunters































And, just a hundred yards away, the Proleek Dolmen


















































Right there near the 5th green
















Thus
















Non-country club environs
















I have seen this sort of thing on golf courses in Brittany, but
always assumed they were just contemporary follies...