| Drumlohan souterrain and ogham stones | |
|---|---|
| Native name Uaimh agus Clochanna Oghaim Dhrom Lócháin (Irish) | |
| The Ogham Cave | |
| Type | Souterrain and ogham stones |
| Location | Drumlohan, Stradbally, County Waterford, Ireland |
| Coordinates | 52°09′46″N7°27′54″W / 52.162846°N 7.464882°W |
| Elevation | 84 m (276 ft) |
| Built | AD 400–700 (ogham stones) AD 800–900 (souterrain) |
| Owner | private |
| Official name | Drumlohan |
| Reference no. | 154 |
Drumlohan souterrain and ogham stones, known locally as the Ogham Cave, is a souterrain with ogham stones forming a National Monument located in County Waterford, Ireland. [1] [2] [3]
Drumlohan souterrain and ogham stones are located in farmland 4 km (2½ mi) east of Lemybrien. [4]
The ten ogham stones were carved between 400 and 700 AD. [5]
The souterrain is believed to have been constructed around the 9th century AD and is aligned WSW, facing the setting sun. Souterrains were storage sites and places of refuge. [6] [7]
In July/August 1867 a local farmer rediscovered the souterrain and ogham stones. In 1936 part of the souterrain was dismantled and some of the ogham stones re-erected above ground. [8]
This souterrain gallery is about 4.9 m (16 ft) long and 1.3 m (4 ft) wide, with a roof height of up to 1.2 m (4 ft). [9] It is constructed of orthostats roofed with lintels, and ten ogham stones were used as lintels and sidestones (some of them being installed upside-down). [10] One of the roofstones bears cup marks. [11]
The stones (CIIC 272–281) vary in size. All are greenschist, except for two of slate and one of conglomerate. The inscriptions are:
This area of Waterford has several other nearby sites with Ogham Stones: North east of Stradbally is Toberkillea with two Ogham Stones, nearby is Island Ringfort which has a Bullaun and a fallen Ogham Stone, north east of Dungarvan is Garranmillon with two Ogham Stones, north west of Dungarvan is St. Seskinan's church at Knockboy with multiple Ogham Stones [16] and Kilcomeragh near Lemybrien with one Ogham Stone. [17]
drumlohan.