Killaclohane Portal Tomb is a megalithic tomb located in the townland of Killaclohane, about 2 km east of Milltown, County Kerry, Ireland. This Neolithic tomb dates to 3800 BC and is Kerry’s oldest man-made structure and earliest identified burial monument. In 2015, the portal tomb or dolmen was in imminent danger of collapse and was excavated and restored by a team led by Kerry County Archaeologist, Dr Michael Connolly. Prior to the excavation of Killaclohane Portal Tomb, very little was known about Neolithic settlement in Kerry and the beginning of agriculture.[1]
Chill an Chlocháin | |
Location | 2km east of Milltown, County Kerry |
---|---|
Coordinates | 52°08′57″N 9°41′37″W / 52.149230°N 9.693490°W |
Type | Portal tomb |
History | |
Material | Stone |
Periods | Megalithic |
Name
editKillaclohane is an English phonetic transcription of Cill an Chlocháin, from coill meaning wood and clochán meaning stepping-stones, causeway or old stone structure.[2] Alternatively, it has also been translated to mean ‘Church of the strong ford’.[3]
Design
editThe portal tomb is constructed with a very large capstone weighing 13.5 tonnes and two tall portal stones at the front facing North. All three stones are green sandstone and are glacial erratics. The two capstones support the weight of the capstone and form the entrance into the burial chamber. The burial chamber is orientated to the North and faces the entrance to Scotia's Glen at the Sliabh Mish Mountains. The excavation of the burial chamber in 2015 produced evidence of cremation burial in the tomb as well as a range of artefacts dating to the early and middle Neolithic period.[4]
Artefacts and burial phases
editThe earliest material found in the tomb was early Neolithic carinated bowl pottery, which is the earliest pottery type found in Ireland. It dated to about 3700 BC and signifies the first phase of burial around the time the tomb was constructed. A range of flint artefacts, including a knife, three arrowheads and a hollow scraper are associated with a second phase of burial around 3500BC. Pottery sherds dating to around 3400 BC indicate a third phase of burial.[5] Furthermore, the tomb was used again in the Bronze Age with at least two cremation burials being put into the tomb around 2400BC. Radiocarbon dates from bone samples and from charcoal indicate a long history of use for burial and subsequently as a focal point or important site in the landscape.[4]
Importance
editThe excavation and conservation of Killaclohane prompted a reassessment of two other megalithic structures in the vicinity. The new assessment suggested that both structures are also portal tombs. The second tomb is located in the same townland in Killaclohane Wood, a public recreational area and it was excavated in 2017 and 2018. A third tomb in the adjacent townland of Brackhill has not been excavated yet. These three tombs comprise a small cluster of portal tombs, a monument type which is predominantly found in the northern half of Ireland and it is the only cluster of portal tombs found in Munster.[4][6]
References
edit- ^ Connolly, Michael (2021). Stone, Bone and Belonging. The early Neolithic portal tombs at Killaclohane, Co. Kerry. Tralee: Kerry County Council. pp. 20–43. ISBN 978-0-9572091-4-5.
- ^ "Cill an Chlocháin/Killaclohane". logainm.ie. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
- ^ "Killaclohane". Coillte. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
- ^ a b c Killaclohane Portal Tomb Virtual Tour 2021, retrieved 29 October 2022
- ^ Connolly, Michael (2021). Stone, Bone and Belonging. The early Neolithic portal tombs at Killaclohane, Co. Kerry. Tralee: Kerry County Council. pp. 222–269. ISBN 978-0-9572091-4-5.
- ^ Connolly, Michael (2021). Stone, Bone and Belonging. The early Neolithic portal tombs at Killaclohane, Co. Kerry. Kerry County Council. pp. 70–129. ISBN 978-0-9572091-4-5.
Further reading
edit- Connolly, Michael. Stone, Bone and Belonging. The early Neolithic Portal Tombs at Killaclohane, Co Kerry. Tralee: Kerry County Council, 2021.