Settlement deserted - medieval, Fiddown, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Settlement Sites
On the outskirts of Fiddown, a quiet parish on the Kilkenny bank of the River Suir, the ground holds the faint outline of a community that simply ceased to be.
A medieval deserted settlement is exactly what the name suggests: the remains, often visible only as low earthworks, disturbed soil, or crop marks, of a village or hamlet that was abandoned during the medieval period and never reoccupied. These sites are scattered across Ireland in considerable numbers, and their silence tends to raise more questions than it answers.
Fiddown sits along a stretch of the Suir that formed part of the historic boundary between the Anglo-Norman lordships of Leinster and the Gaelic territories further west, which makes the surrounding landscape one where settlement patterns shifted repeatedly under pressure from war, plague, and economic change. The great wave of abandonments across medieval Ireland is often associated with the fourteenth century, when the arrival of the Black Death after 1348, combined with prolonged periods of conflict and agricultural difficulty, emptied many smaller rural settlements for good. Whether the Fiddown site fits that pattern, or reflects an earlier or later episode of depopulation, is not currently known from available sources.
The site is recorded as a protected monument, which means the ground itself retains an official status even where surface traces are subtle or obscured by later agricultural use. Deserted settlements of this kind rarely announce themselves dramatically; what survives is usually a matter of slight rises and depressions in a field, the ghost of a street line, or the faint suggestion of enclosures that once defined domestic plots.