Enclosure, Knockawaddra Middle, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
In the improved farmland of Knockawaddra Middle, in County Kerry, there is an ancient enclosure that can only really be seen from the air, and even then only under the right conditions.
On the ground, it is almost entirely absent. A slight waviness in the grass, an almost imperceptible rise and fall in the soil, is all that remains to suggest that something deliberate once stood here.
The enclosure was identified through black and white aerial photography taken in 1998, in which it appears as a cropmark, a phenomenon where buried or disturbed ground causes overlying vegetation to grow differently, producing a faint but readable outline from above. What the photograph revealed was a univallate enclosure, meaning a roughly circular area defined by a single earthen bank or ditch, approximately 25 to 30 metres across. Such enclosures are relatively common in the Irish landscape, but most survive in some visible form. This one does not. Agricultural improvement and the amalgamation of smaller fields into larger ones have largely erased it, pressing the past flat beneath working land. Michael Connolly examined the site as part of his 2008 doctoral research at University College Cork, which looked at prehistoric settlement patterns across the Lee Valley near Tralee, placing individual sites like this within a broader picture of how people organised themselves across the Kerry landscape in prehistoric times.
There is nothing to visit in any conventional sense. The land gives almost nothing away, and the enclosure's existence is now essentially an archival fact, preserved in aerial imagery rather than in earth or stone. That, in a way, is its particular interest: a place that registers more clearly in a photograph taken from altitude than it ever will to someone standing in the field itself.