Enclosure, Oldtown Demesne, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Enclosures
There is something quietly unsettling about a place that exists primarily as an absence. At Oldtown Demesne in County Kildare, an enclosure is recorded on historical maps but has left no mark on the ground that anyone has been able to find. What survives is the cartographic ghost of something that was once considered worth noting.
Taylor's Map of County Kildare, published in 1783, shows a small circular feature sitting close to a road at this location. Circular enclosures of this kind are most often interpreted as ringforts, the farmstead enclosures of early medieval Ireland, typically defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches and dating broadly to the period between the sixth and tenth centuries. Whether this particular feature was ever a ringfort, or something else entirely, cannot now be said with confidence. By 1985, when the site was examined, no surface traces remained visible. The ground had closed over whatever was there, leaving only the earlier cartographic record as evidence that something once broke the landscape at this spot.