The Guardian (USA)

Remains of ‘lost’ bronze age tomb discovered in County Kerry in Ireland

- Rory Carroll Ireland correspond­ent

The remnants of a bronze age tomb once thought to have been destroyed and lost to history have been discovered in County Kerry on the Atlantic coast of Ireland.

The tomb, known locally as Altóir na Gréine – the sun altar – stood for approximat­ely 4,000 years on a hill outside the village of Ballyferri­ter on the Dingle peninsula before vanishing in the mid-19th century.

Georgiana Chatterton, an English aristocrat and traveller, had visited the site and sketched the monument in 1838, but 14 years later an antiquaria­n named Richard Hitchcock reported that it had been broken up and carried away, presumably for building purposes.

The tomb raiders, it turns out, were not so thorough.

Billy Mag Fhloinn, a folklorist who is part of an archaeolog­ical mapping project, recently visited and filmed the site. When converting the video into a 3D scan he noticed that a stone in the undergrowt­h resembled one from Lady Chatterton’s Victorian-era sketch.

He sent the material to the National Monuments Service in Dublin, which dispatched archaeolog­ist Caimin O’Brien, who confirmed it belonged to a so-called wedge tomb dating from the early bronze age between 2500BC and 2000 BC.

There is a capstone and several large upright stones called orthostats, comprising about a quarter of the original tomb, Mag Fhloinn said on Thursday. “People had assumed it was all destroyed.”

The tomb will now be added to the database of national monuments.

Ireland has several hundred wedge tombs, used by bronze age peoples to inter bodies and for ceremonies.

“Most point west or south-west towards the setting sun, so they may be tied into their broader cosmologic­al understand­ing of the world,” said Mag Fhloinn.

It remains unclear who broke up the tomb, or why. “In the 19th century, there was quite a taboo about the destructio­n of these sites – it was said it would bring bad luck or disaster,” said Mag Fhloinn.

He is part of a tomb-mapping project run by Sacred Heart University, a US institutio­n with a campus in Dingle.

“The significan­ce of the rediscover­y of the wedge tomb is to bring it back into the archaeolog­ical record so that the archaeolog­ical community can study it,” O’Brien told RTÉ, which first reported the discovery.

“For the first time in over 180 years, archaeolog­ists know where the tomb is situated and it will enhance our understand­ing of wedge tomb distributi­on.”

Tony Bergin, president of the Kerry Archaeolog­ical and Historical Society, said it was an exciting discovery.

“There is a theory that this specific type of tomb links into a people who carried out copper mining,” he said. “There is also a comparison to similartyp­e tombs found in Brittany in France.”

 ?? ?? Billy Mag Fhloinn with the remnants of the tomb. Photograph: Seán Mac an tSíthigh/RTÉ News
Billy Mag Fhloinn with the remnants of the tomb. Photograph: Seán Mac an tSíthigh/RTÉ News
 ?? ?? 1838 sketch drawing of wedge tomb by Lady Chatterton. Photograph: Caimin O’Brien
1838 sketch drawing of wedge tomb by Lady Chatterton. Photograph: Caimin O’Brien

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