The Hill
of Tara (Irish: Cnoc
na Teamhrach,Teamhair or Teamhair
na Rí), located near the River
Boyne, is an archaeological
complex that runs between Navan and Dunshaughlin in County
Meath, Ireland. It contains a
number of ancient monuments and,
according to tradition, was the seat
of the High
King of Ireland.
Features
Ancient monuments[
Layout of the Hill of
Tara
At the summit of the hill, to the
north of the ridge, is an oval Iron
Age hilltop
enclosure, measuring 318 metres
(1,043 ft) north-south by 264 metres
(866 ft) east-west and enclosed by
an internal ditch and external bank,
known as Ráith
na Ríogh (the
Fort of the Kings, also known as the
Royal Enclosure). The most prominent
earthworks within are the two linked
enclosures, a bivallate
(double-ditched) ring fort and a
bivallate ring barrow known as Teach
Chormaic (Cormac's
House) and the Forradh or
Royal Seat. In the middle of the Forradh is
a standing
stone, which is believed to be
the Lia
Fáil (Stone
of Destiny) at which the High Kings
were crowned. According to legend,
the stone would scream if a series
of challenges were met by the
would-be king. At his touch the
stone would let out a screech that
could be heard all over Ireland. To
the north of the ring-forts is a
small Neolithicpassage
tomb known
as Dumha
na nGiall (the Mound
of the Hostages), which was
constructed around 3,400 (cal.) BC.
To the north, just outside the
bounds of the Ráith
na Rig, is a ringfort with three
banks known as Ráith
na Seanadh (the
Rath of the Synods). Excavations of
this monument have produced Roman artefacts
dating from the 1st–3rd centuries.
Farther north is a long, narrow
rectangular feature known as the
Banqueting Hall (Teach
Miodhchuarta), although it is
more likely to have been a
ceremonial avenue or cursus monument
approaching the site, and three
circular earthworks known as the
Sloping Trenches and Gráinne's
Fort. All three are large ring
barrows which may have been built
too close to the steep declivity and
subsequently slipped.
The "Mound of the
Hostages"
To the south of the Royal Enclosure
lies a ring-fort known as Ráith
Laoghaire (Laoghaire's
Fort), where the eponymous king is
said to have been buried in an
upright position. Half a mile south
of the Hill of Tara is another hill
fort known as Rath Maeve, the fort
of either the legendary queen Medb,
who is more usually associated with Connacht,
or the less well known legendary
figure of Medb
Lethderg, who is associated with
Tara.
Church
A church, called Saint Patrick's, is
on the eastern side of the hilltop.
The 'Rath of the Synods' has been
partly destroyed by its churchyard.The
modern church was built in 1822–23
on the site of an earlier one.The
earliest evidence of a church at
Tara is a charter dating from the
1190s. In 1212, this church was
"among the possessions confirmed to
the Knights
Hospitallers of Saint John of Kilmainham by Pope
Innocent III". A
1791 illustration shows the church
building internally divided into a
nave and chancel, with a bell-tower
over the western end. A stump of
wall marks the site of the old
church today, but some of its
stonework was re-used in the current
church. The building is now used as
a visitor centre.
Tara's significance
Area known as
"Banqueting Hall"
The Hill of Tara is documented in
the 11th-century text The
Book of Invasions as
the seat of the high-kings of
Ireland from the times of the
mythological Fir
Bolg and Tuatha
Dé Danann to
the text's composition. However, it
is currently believed[by
whom?] that
the institution of High-kingship
of Ireland did
not confer authority over the whole
island on its possessor.
The Hill of Tara has been in use by
people from the Neolithic era,
although it is not known if Tara was
continuously used as a sacred and/or
a political centre from the
Neolithic period to the 1100s AD.
The central part of the site could
not have housed a large permanent
retinue, implying that it was
instead used for occasional
meetings. There were no large
defensive structures. Earliest
extant written records show that
high kings were inaugurated there,
and the "Seanchas Mor" legal
text (written some time after 600AD)
specified that the king must drink ale and
symbolically marry the goddess Maeve
(Medb) in order to qualify for high
kingship.
Previous scholarly disputes over
Tara's initial importance increased
when 20th-century archaeologists
identified pre-Iron Age monuments
and human-built habitable forms from
the Neolithic period (roughly 5,000
years ago). One of these forms, the
Mound of the Hostages, has a short
passage aligned with sunrise on the
solar cross-quarter-days coinciding
with ancient annual Celtic festivals
celebrated on the midpoints between
vernal and autumnal equinox ("Imbolc"
honoring preparations for planting
time or 'pre-spring' on about the
4th of February) and summer and
winter solstice ("Samhain"
honoring harvest time or 'first of
winter' on about the 8th of
November). The
mound's passage is shorter than the
long entryways of monuments like Newgrange,
which makes it less precise in
providing alignments with the Sun;
still, Martin
Brennan, in The
Stones of Time, states that the
daily changes in the position of a
13-foot (4-m) long sunbeam are more
than adequate to determine specific
dates.
A theory that may predate the Hill
of Tara's splendor before Celtic
times is the legendary story naming
the Hill of Tara as the capital of
the Tuatha Dé Danann, the pre-Celtic
dwellers of Ireland. When the Celts
established a seat in the hill, the
hill became the place from which the kings
of Mide ruled
Ireland. There is much debate among
historians as to how far the King's
influence spread; it may have been
as little as the middle of Ireland,
or may have been all the northern
half. The high kingship of the whole
island was only established to an
effective degree by Máel
Sechnaill mac Máele Ruanaid (Malachy
I). Irish pseudohistorians of the
Middle Ages made it stretch back
into prehistoric times. Atop the
hill stands a stone pillar that was
the Irish Lia Fáil (Stone of
Destiny) on which the High Kings of
Ireland were crowned; legends
suggest that the stone was required
to roar three times if the chosen
one was a true king (compare with
the Scottish Lia
Fail). Both the Hill of Tara as
a hill and as a capital seems to
have political and religious
influence, which diminished since St.
Patrick's time.
During the rebellion
of 1798, United
Irishmen formed
a camp on the hill but were attacked
and defeated by
British troops on 26 May 1798 and
the Lia Fáil was moved to mark the
graves of the 400 rebels who died on
the hill that day. In 1843, the
Irish Member of Parliament Daniel
O'Connell hosted
a peaceful political
demonstrationon Hill of Tara in
favour of repeal of
the Act
of Union which
drew over 750,000 people, which
indicates the enduring importance of
the Hill of Tara.
During the turn of the 20th century
the Hill of Tara was excavated by British
Israelists who
thought that the Irish were
part of the Lost
Tribes of Israel and
that the hill contained the Ark
of the Covenant.
Motorway development
A banner protesting
against the proposed
motorway, 2007
The M3 motorway, owned by Siac
Construction and Cintra, S.A., which
opened in June 2010, passes through
the Tara-Skryne
Valley –
as does the existing N3
road. Protesters argue that
since the Tara Discovery Programme
started in 1992, there is an
appreciation that the Hill of Tara
is just the central complex of a
wider landscape. The distance
between the motorway and the exact
site of the Hill is 2.2 km (1.4 mi)
– it intersects the old N3 at the
Blundelstown interchange between the
Hill of Tara and the Hill of Skyrne.
The presence of this interchange
situated in the valley has led to
allegations that further development
of an energy generator is planned
near Tara.
An
alternative route approximately 6 km
(3.7 mi) west of the Hill of Tara is
claimed to be a straighter, cheaper
and less destructive alternative. On
Sunday 23 September 2007 over 1500
people met on the hill of Tara to
take part in a human sculpture
representing a harp and spelling out
the words "SAVE TARA VALLEY" as a
call for the rerouting of the M3
motorway away from Tara valley.
Actors Stuart
Townsend and Jonathan
Rhys Meyers attended
this event.
The Hill of Tara was included in the World
Monuments Fund's 2008 Watch List
of the 100 Most Endangered Sites in
the world. It
was included, in 2009, in the 15
must-see endangered cultural
treasures in the world by the Smithsonian
Institution.
There is currently a
letter writing campaign being
undertaken to preserve the Hill of
Tara.