Enclosure, Carrigeenwood, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
In the townland of Carrigeenwood in County Kerry, an enclosure sits in the landscape, recorded and mapped but not yet fully explained.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common yet least understood monument types in Ireland, ranging from prehistoric ring-ditches and early medieval farmsteads to later field boundaries and ecclesiastical enclosures. Without knowing which category this one falls into, it occupies a quietly ambiguous place in the archaeological record, present enough to be noted, elusive enough to resist easy interpretation.
The name Carrigeenwood itself offers a small clue to its surroundings. The Irish "carraigín" suggests a place of small rocks or outcrops, and the addition of "wood" points to a landscape that has likely shifted between scrub, tillage, and grazing over the centuries. Kerry's archaeology is dense and varied, shaped by thousands of years of settlement along its peninsulas, uplands, and river valleys. Enclosures in this county have been associated with everything from Iron Age habitation to early Christian activity, and many remain undated in any precise sense, identified from aerial photography or field survey rather than excavation.