VISIT THE HISTORIC HEART OF IRELAND
Boyne Valley makes for a dazzling easy-to-reach Dublin day trip
While Dublin beckons with reminders of its stirring modern history on nearly every street corner, the best place to commune with the ancient soul of Ireland is its lush countryside. Iron Age monuments pepper the landscape, and just standing next to a megalith that predates the pharaohs is stirring. An ideal spot to experience the spirit of Old Eire is the Boyne River Valley, which offers a worldclass concentration of historical and spiritual sites just an hour’s drive north of Dublin.
The most popular attraction there is the archeological site of Brú na Bóinne, or, “dwelling place of the Boyne.” Upon arrival, visitors get appointments to tour the 5,000-year-old-passage tombs: Newgrange and Knowth.
Thought-provoking and mindbogglingly old, these tombs can give you chills. Exploring them, you begin to understand the reverence that ancient people had for nature, and the need they felt to bury their dead in great tombs. These massive grass-covered burial mounds were built with a deep chamber inside, reached by a narrow stone passage. Both tombs are worth seeing, but if you have time for just one I’d pick Newgrange, because you can go inside ( bonus: it’s also the more famous of the two).
Dating from 3200 BC, Newgrange is 500 years older than the pyramids at Giza. Like Stonehenge, the ancients aligned this monument with the stars. At dawn on the winter solstice, the sun’s rays hit a small “roof box” opening above the narrow passage. The beams reach deep into the burial chamber, illuminating its inner reaches for 17 minutes with a natural light show. While we know nothing of Newgrange’s builders, this most certainly was a sacred spot — for a cult of the dead, a cult of the sun, or both.
This grassy mound, 76 metres across and 12 metres high, is ringed by dozens of “curbstones,” each about three metres long and weighing five tonnes. In front of the doorway lies the most famous of the curbstones, the entrance stone. Its left half is carved with three spirals, which have become
a kind of poster child for prehistoric art.
A guide takes visitors deep into the tomb leading to the crossshaped central chamber under a six-metre-high, igloo-type stone dome. The ancients placed bones and ashes here, under 200,000 tonnes of stone and dirt, to wait for that special winter’s moment. In an awe-inspiring climax, the guide turns off the lights. Then he switches on a distant light that gradually brightens, recreating the rays of the sun as seen on the shortest day of the year.
A short drive to the south takes you to the Hill of Tara — the most important centre of political and religious power in pre-Christian Ireland. This is where Ireland’s ancient kings claimed their throne, and where St. Patrick preached his deal-clinching sermon that converted the pagans to Christianity. Aerial views of the hill show plenty of mystifying circles and lines, but on ground level there’s more to feel than to see. As you wander among the well-worn ditches and hills, you’ll see the Mound of Hostages (a Bronze Age passage grave, c. 2500 BC), a couple of ancient sacred stones, and a war memorial.
Farther north in the same valley, the pastoral, riverside site of the Battle of the Boyne is one of Europe’s most pivotal battlegrounds. In the battle that occurred here, the Protestant British broke Catholic resistance, establishing Protestant rule over all Ireland and Britain. The real attraction is reached by crossing the River Boyne on a bridge. This spot, called Oldbridge, is where the most frantic action took place on that bloody day in 1690. If you’re there in the summer, go on a Sunday for a “living history” demonstration. Guides in 17th-century garb give musket-firing demos and recreate a cavalry charge at full gallop.
The green Boyne Valley is a joy by car, and all the sights described here are within a 30-minute drive of one another. If you get an early start, you could see the entire region in a day.
Rick Steves (ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.