Enclosure, Listrolin, Co. Kilkenny

Co. Kilkenny |

Enclosures

Enclosure, Listrolin, Co. Kilkenny

In the townland of Listrolin, in the south of County Kilkenny, there is an enclosure.

That spare designation, enclosure, covers a broad range of ancient earthworks in the Irish archaeological record, from the remains of ring forts and farmsteads to ceremonial or boundary structures, their original purposes often difficult to untangle after centuries of weathering and field clearance. What they share is an act of deliberate demarcation, somebody, at some point, deciding that a particular patch of ground deserved to be set apart.

Listrolin itself sits in quiet farming country, and like many such townland sites across Leinster, its enclosure survives as a scheduled monument without, for now, a great deal of published detail attached to it. The name Listrolin is of Irish origin, and the lios element, meaning a fort or enclosure, appears frequently in place names across Ireland precisely because these earthworks were so common a feature of the early medieval landscape. Whether this particular site is the one that gave the townland its name, or whether it is a separate and perhaps earlier feature, is the kind of question that further fieldwork or documentary research might eventually answer.

Rated 0 out of 5

Visitor Notes

Review type for post source and places source type not found
Added by
Picture of Pete F
Pete F
IrishHistory.com is passionate about helping people discover and connect with the rich stories of their local communities.
Please use the form below to submit any photos you may have of Enclosure, Listrolin, Co. Kilkenny. We're happy to take any suggested edits you may have too. Please be advised it will take us some time to get to these submissions. Thank you.
Name
Email
Message
Upload images/documents
Maximum file size: 100 MB
If you'd like to add an image or a PDF please do it here.

Advertisement