Rathcoran | |
---|---|
Native name Irish: Ráth Cuaráin | |
Type | passage grave and hillfort |
Location | Baltinglass Hill, Baltinglass, County Wicklow, Ireland |
Coordinates | 52°56′49″N6°40′59″W / 52.947028°N 6.683191°W Coordinates: 52°56′49″N6°40′59″W / 52.947028°N 6.683191°W |
Area | Slaney Valley |
Elevation | 383 m (1,257 ft) |
Built | passage grave: c. 3500–3000 BC hillfort: c. 1000 BC |
Official name | Baltinglass Hill Passage Tomb and Hillfort |
Reference no. | 328 |
Rathcoran is a passage grave and hillfort and National Monument located atop Baltinglass Hill, County Wicklow, Ireland.
Rathcoran is located atop Baltinglass Hill, 2 km (1.2 mi) east-northeast of Baltinglass, overlooking the River Slaney.
The passage grave is thought to be contemporaneous with Newgrange, i.e. it was built 3500–3000 BC, during the Neolithic.
The site was excavated in 1934–36 by P. T. Walshe, [1] revealing evidence of the cremations of at least 3 adults and a child. Fragments of quartz unearthed during the excavation suggest that it was used for decoration. Carbonised hazelnuts, wheat grains and a saddle quern point to the extent of local climate change: in Neolithic Ireland, the climate was drier and warmer, County Wicklow's glens were densely wooded, and farmers could grow crops at altitudes above 300 m (980 ft). [2]
Five hillforts surround Baltinglass. Rathcoran, atop Baltinglass Hill is dated to 1000 BC or slightly earlier: during the Bronze Age. The name is from the Irish Ráth Cuaráin ("Cuarán's ringfort"), but this name is doubtful: the original name could be Ráth Charnáin, "ringfort of the cairn." [3]
The passage tomb survives as a multi-period kerbed cairn with a diameter of 27 m (89 ft), underneath which are five structures:
The finds from the site include the cremated bones of at least three adults and one child, flint scrapers, Carrowkeel pottery and bone pins. Finds from beneath the cairn included a stone axe, a flint javelin-head, scrapers, an egg-shaped stone, carbonised wheat grains and hazelnuts. A saddle quern was also found in the cairn. [4] [5]
The Rathcoran hillfort, a bivallate ringfort, is at the top of Baltinglass Hill, and surrounds the cairn. Stones from the cairn were moved to make a protective wall. It has a double rampart and perhaps was intended to have a third, which is incompleted. It encloses a roughly oval shape, around 400 m (440 yd) at its widest point. [6]
A chambered cairn is a burial monument, usually constructed during the Neolithic, consisting of a sizeable chamber around and over which a cairn of stones was constructed. Some chambered cairns are also passage-graves. They are found throughout Britain and Ireland, with the largest number in Scotland.
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