IT Sligo lecturer Marion in RTÉ documentary about the Burren
IT SLIGO lecturer Dr Marion Dowd featured on the RTÉ documentary The Burren: Heart of Stone last Sunday.
It was the second of a two-part epic documentary that took four years to make, looking at one of Ireland’s most unique landscapes and digging deep into its past. Episode two explored the underground caverns that populate the Burren. Dr Dowd, who is an IT Sligo Faculty of Science archaeologist specialising in Irish cave archaeology, also published an article to accompany the launch of the documentary for RTÉ Brainstorm. She spoke about the rituals that took place in caves thousands of years ago.
According to Dr Dowd, caves have been used by people for thousands of years in Ireland and hundreds are scattered around the country, including in Sligo. “Almost 1,000 caves were scattered throughout Ireland, located in limestone landscapes such as the Burren in Clare, the Dungarvan Valley in Waterford, and the Cúil Irra peninsula in Sligo. For as long as people have lived in Ireland they have used caves.
“In prehistoric times, caves were associated primarily with ritual activities, burial, religious practices and the dead. Something unusual began to happen about 2,500 years ago in a period known as the Late Bronze Age. For the first time, prehistoric people began venturing into the deepest and darkest parts of caves.” Dr Dowd said the fascination with caves of these Late Bronze Age people is unknown but they took extreme risks to explore and use caves for important ritual purposes.
“Many of these journeys were relatively dangerous, particularly at a time when subterranean excursions were lit only by simple wooden torches.
At some sites, reaching the deepest parts of a cave took quite some time and involved crawling through low chambers, squeezing through narrow passages, and leaving the world outside for several hours. It is possible that some of these journeys into darkness took several days. “The gods or ancestors or supernatural beings that Bronze Age people may have associated with caves are not known to us. We can tell part of the story, but much of it is lost to the darkness.”
The documentary was made by award winning director Katrina Costello of Sea Fever Productions and is narrated by actor Brendan Gleeson.
The Burren: Heart of Stone can be watched on RTÉ Player.