Enclosure, Courtown Little, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Enclosures
In a field in Courtown Little, County Kildare, there is a monument that most people would walk straight across without any sense that they were doing so. It exists, for now, almost entirely as information rather than as physical form: a faint cropmark, roughly circular, about 39 metres in diameter, visible only in aerial photography taken under the right conditions.
Cropmarks appear when buried features, walls, ditches, or filled pits, affect the growth of whatever is planted above them. Soil disturbed by an ancient ditch tends to retain more moisture, producing lusher, taller crops in a thin band that traces the original cut. From ground level, nothing distinguishes the spot. From the air, and particularly in dry summers when moisture differences are most pronounced, the outline can become legible. The photograph that brought this enclosure to attention was taken on 28 June 2018 and was identified by Edward O'Riordan, with the record subsequently compiled by Caimin O'Brien. Circular enclosures of this kind are generally associated with early medieval settlement in Ireland, the period roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries, when a ringfort, an enclosed farmstead defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, was the standard unit of rural life. A diameter of 39 metres sits comfortably within the typical range for such sites, though without excavation the date and function of this particular example remain open questions.
What gives the site a quiet strangeness is precisely its mode of survival. Many ringforts were levelled by agricultural improvement over the past two centuries, their banks spread and their ditches filled. This one left no bank, or none that persists above the ploughsoil, yet the negative space of its ditch apparently endures, legible only to a satellite passing overhead on a warm June afternoon.