Enclosure, Ballybane, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
Between a busy railway line and a rural road in County Kerry, a low mound in the landscape hints at something older beneath the surface.
The site at Ballybane is classified as a possible enclosure, the kind of circular or oval earthwork that turns up across Ireland, usually the remnant of a ringfort or settlement boundary from the early medieval period. What makes this one quietly interesting is precisely how little of it remains visible, and how completely ordinary life has moved in on top of it.
The raised ground, measuring roughly 17.3 metres north to south, sits squeezed between the Tralee-Killarney railway line to the east and the Scart-Fieries road to the west. A shed and a bungalow now occupy most of the area. The strongest evidence that something deliberate once stood here comes not from the ground itself but from above: an aerial photograph shows a circular feature in the field, the kind of cropmark or soil discolouration that often betrays buried archaeology long after surface traces have been ploughed or built over. Aerial survey has been one of the most reliable tools for locating such sites across Ireland, where centuries of farming and development have reduced many enclosures to little more than a faint rise in the grass or a ghostly ring visible only from altitude and in the right light.
