A couple of years ago, on our way to visit a friend in Ireland's County Donegal, we broke the journey by staying a couple of
nights in the Boyne Valley, home to some of the most impressive
Neolithic monuments anywhere in the world. Brú na Bóinne, also known as
Newgrange, and its companion mounds Knowth and Dowth are stupendous
megalithic passage graves dating to around 3,300 BC, hundreds of
years older than the earliest Egyptian pyramid.
We struck lucky: the place we stayed turned out to be a beautiful old house with lovely
views next door to the great mound of Dowth: and I mean next door
– the mound towered right up over the garden fence; we could go out before
breakfast or last thing in the evening with our dog Polly and walk around it and
over it and have it completely to ourselves. Dowth, or Dubad, is not a
tourist site like its companion tombs, Knowth and Newgrange. No shuttle
buses visit it. There is a huge crater at its centre, the result of the
local landlord blasting a hole in it with dynamite sometime in the 19th
century. If he hoped to find treasure, he was disappointed. But the
mound was so massive and so well built that even the explosion did not
damage either of the two passage graves deep within. Here's one of the
two entrances, with Polly nosing around to give it scale: in the
foreground is one of the huge carved sill-stones which edge the entire perimeter
of the mound. This one is carved with spirals.
You can't go in; there's a locked iron gate. I tried to take a picture
through it, and maybe you can just make out the passage running back
into the mound towards the inner chamber.
We walked over and all around the mound. One of the great kerb-stones is
carved with seven suns; the picture I took didn't come out too well:
... but there's a lovely Youtube timelapse of it taken during a winter
sunrise by Anthony Murphy of the blog Mythical Ireland:
Of course there is a legend about this amazing place: the story goes like
this. Long ago in the time of a king called Bressal Bó-dibad, a plague
struck down all the cattle of Ireland until at last there were only eight left, one bull
and seven cows. (The second part of the king’s name means ‘lacking in
cattle'.) So Bressal Bó-dibad decided to build a tower ‘like the Tower
of Nimrod’, so that he could pass into heaven. Who knows what he meant to do there? Challenge God to restore his cattle? The tale doesn't say, but men from
all over Ireland came to help him build the tower – the mound, that is – but
there was a condition: the work must be completed within a single day. So the king’s
sister told him that she would ‘stay the sun's course in the vault of
heaven, so that they might have an endless day to accomplish their
task’. She worked her magic and the sun halted in mid-sky, as it did
for Aaron and Moses in the Bible. But Bressal Bó-dibad went after his sister and
committed incest with her; he raped her. Then her
spell was undone, darkness fell and the men of Ireland abandoned their
work. And the king’s sister cursed the mound, saying: 'Dubad [darkness] shall be the name
of this place for ever.'
If that doesn’t give you the shivers, I don’t know what will. And then to find the stone with the seven suns, half buried in the grasses… well!
You can read more about the legend and the mound at Anthony Murphy’s blog Mythical Ireland, here: http://blog.mythicalireland.com/2016/06/dowth-and-story-of-hunger-ancient.html
Fantastic. I love the way that it becomes darkness..
ReplyDeleteIsn't it wonderful? And creepy...
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