Enclosure, Rathclogh, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Enclosures
A circular ghost roughly twenty metres across lies beneath the farmland of Rathclogh in County Kilkenny, invisible at ground level and only legible from the air.
It shows up as a cropmark, the kind of subtle discolouration in a growing crop that betrays buried archaeology beneath. Where a fosse, or defensive ditch, was once cut into the earth and later filled in, the soil retains different moisture levels from the undisturbed ground around it, and in dry summers the crop above it ripens at a slightly different rate. The result, seen from altitude, is a faint ring traced in the field as clearly as a line drawn on paper.
This particular enclosure came to light on an aerial photograph taken on 9 July 1964, part of the Cambridge University Collection of Aerial Photography. What makes the Rathclogh site more than a curiosity in isolation is the density of similar features around it. At least five other enclosures have been recorded within a radius of roughly 220 metres, the majority of them also identified solely as cropmarks. Only one of the cluster, lying about 155 metres to the south-west, appears to survive as an earthwork with some presence above ground. The others, like this one, exist only as traces readable from a low-flying aircraft on the right day, in the right light, with the right crop in the field below. Whether these enclosures represent a single period of settlement, a family grouping, or activity spread across many centuries is not something the aerial record alone can answer, but their concentration in one small area of Kilkenny suggests this patch of ground was used and reused in ways that left a surprisingly legible mark.