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dolmens ireland
Home
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ireland
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Ireland Dolmens
Choose from our selection of dolmens in ireland below - to view details on each, just click 'More'
18 dolmens in ireland
Page 2 of 2
Proleek
Ballymascanlon, Louth
A splendid 'tripod-dolmen', 12 feet in height, standing at the edge of a field near a ruined gallery-tomb. It is reached by a signposted path from the grounds of Ballymascanlon Hotel. It has long been called 'The Giant's Load' since, from a certain viewpoint, it resembles a huge figure bowed under the weight of a heavy burden - in this case a rounded granite capstone weighing in excess of 30 tons. This well known landmark has often been illustrated. As early as 1742 an engraving of it appear...
Haroldstown Dolmen
Haroldstown, Tullow, Carlow
Improbable though it may seem, this interesting megalithic tomb was lived in by a family in the nineteenth century, a purpose to which its large interior was suited and possibly to some extent modified. Gaps between the side-stones were windproofed with turf and mud, and no doubt the resulting 'house' was as snug as some of the tiny cabins occupied around the time of the Great Famine. The presence of a horse in the photograph is a reminder too that these ancient structures not infrequently serv...
Proleek Dolmen
Ballymascanlon, Louth
A very fine example of a Portal Dolmen in the grounds of the Ballymascanlon Hotel, and with a capstone of about 40 tons supported by three legs. Legend says that a wish will be granted to those who can throw a pebble on to the top of the capstone so that it stays there. In the same field is a wedge-tomb....
Woodtown
Dublin 1, Dublin
Although partly collapsed on its supports and overgrown with bracken and scrub, this is nonetheless a noble megalith.
when complete it would have stood 15 feet high at the chamber entrance, where there now survives only the broken portion of one of the great portal stones, against which the massy capstone leans, its other end resting on the ground. A second portal stone nearly 15 feet long, lies fallen alongside.
Borlase believed this to be a distinct class of tomb - an...
Ballylumford Dolmen
Larne, Antrim
The Ballylumford Dolmen is better known to locals as the Druid's Altar and is a dolmen typical of many found in Ulster and throughout Ireland. Larne used to be called "the port of the Standing Stones" by the Romans, no doubt because of the presence of dolmens like this one and the numberous standing stones and boundary marker stones which can still be seen across the borough. The dolmen, under which historical artifacts have been recovered by archaeologists, would appear to have stood over a b...
Kiltiernan Dolmen
Kiltiernan, Dublin 18, Dublin
Kiltiernan Dolmen is a stone age dolmen from about 200 B.C, it is located at the foothills of the Dublin Montains.
The dolmen is now partically collapsed.
The tomb mesures 6 meters long, 4 meters in height and it weighs 40 tonnes....
Craigs
Antrim, Antrim
Its capstone is supported by three uprights, but on e of these-and the capstone-were erected in the 19th century to make it look like a dolmen. However, the monument itself is genuinely Stone Age, for two of the uprights supporting the capstone are the portals of the forecourt of a court-tomb of around 3000 B.C., which gave access to a burial chamber of three sections in a cairn bordered with kerb-stones. Easier to find than this court-tomb, which is known locally as the Broad Stone, is anothe...
Legananny Dolmen
Ballynahinch, Down
This dramatic granite dolmen consists of three comparatively thin and widely spaced uprights. They carry a large and seemingly almost weightless capstone which - appropriately enough for a Stone Age burial place - looks rather like a coffin on stilts. It is one of Ireland's most frequently illustrated dolmens....
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