Settlement platform, Lugduff, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Settlement Sites
At Lugduff in County Wicklow, a raised earthen platform sits to the west of an early church site, connected to it by a paved causeway.
That combination, a deliberate platform paired with a formalised stone-laid approach, suggests this was once more than incidental ground. Settlement platforms of this kind are understood to represent the raised, engineered bases on which early medieval buildings or enclosures once stood, lifted slightly above the surrounding terrain for drainage, definition, or status.
The platform and its causeway were noted by Harold Leask in 1950, and the site sits within the wider ecclesiastical landscape of Glendalough, one of the most extensively documented early Christian complexes in Ireland. Robert Cochrane had earlier produced detailed plans and notes on the ecclesiastical remains across the valley, published in 1925 as part of the Eightieth Annual Report of the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland, and the Lugduff platform appears in that documentary record alongside the church it adjoins. The pairing of a church with an adjacent settlement platform points to the kind of clustered, purposefully arranged community that characterised early Irish monastic life, where domestic, agricultural, and spiritual functions occupied distinct but related spaces within a shared enclosure.