Friday, October 8, 2010

Bru na Boinne Ireland

Bru na Boinne Ireland

What is it about Bru na Boinne that makes it so special... so much so that it's one of the "must sees" of Ireland?

The site contains passage graves, standing stones, henges and other features. It's a World Heritage site, and artcles says it contains some of the world's most historically significant Neoltic passage graves, most notably Newgrange, Dowth and Knowth.

OK... but... what is it about the site that "takes your breath away"? I suppose it's because it's beginnings are hidden in Ireland's misty ancient history. Newgrange is listed in several Celtic sagas.

A thousand years older than Stonehenge in England, it is a powerful and evocative testament to the mind-boggling achievements of prehistoric people.... There's another reason it's so special... because it shows us what we can achieve. I mean, if early peoples could do THAT... just think what we can do.


To a certain extent, you need to have a attraction with ancient monuments and standing stones. If you do, then certainly you will enjoy Bru na Boinne. The monuments at this location seem to have always been connected with "magic". They seem tied to the study of the planets... in this case mostly the Winter Solstice.

Through the centuries, they were woven into myths and folklore and became regarded as the cemetary of the High-Kings of Tara and Ireland.

The main monuments here are Newgrange, Knowth, and Dowth.

Newgrange is a passage tomb, but that sounds so... ordinary. It is one of the most famous prehistoric sites in the world. It consists of a mound which is 250 feet (76 meters) across and 40 feet (12 meters) high. What makes it visually so impressive is that the front is faced with a wall of sparkling white quartz stones. Close up it is the art on the stones that will impress. The burial chamber inside has remained intact for 5,000 years.


Knowth is the largest of the passage graves here. Its large mound is impressive, but it lacks the spectacular white front of New Grange. There is, however, an remarkable amount of megalithic art in this tomb.

Dowth is the oldest of these three, but it is the least eye-catching to tourists because it is less excavated. Its decorations are not as complex, though it may once have been faced with quartz like Newgrange. Newgrange and Dowth have passages that allow light in during the Winter Solstice.

OK... a group of graves, right? NO.... a magical site... Irish Fairies aside.

No comments:

Post a Comment