Enclosure, Rathonoragh, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Enclosures
At Rathonoragh in County Sligo, there is a site that has spent decades oscillating between existence and non-existence on the archaeological record.
For a time it was officially logged as a possible enclosure, then quietly dropped, then partially rehabilitated, all without a single stone or earthwork ever being confirmed on the ground.
The story begins in 1989, when the site was entered into the Sites and Monuments Record as a possible enclosure, based on a feature spotted in a high-level aerial photograph. By the time the more selective Record of Monuments and Places was compiled in 1995, the entry had been dropped entirely. A field visit in the early 1990s found nothing to justify the original classification: the area in question was described as a gentle south-facing slope set within enlarged, recently drained agricultural fields, with no visible remains whatsoever. The original identification, it turned out, had been a misreading of whatever the aerial camera had captured. The site appeared to have been a cartographic ghost. Then, in 2010, a fresh examination of aerial photography by Ordnance Survey Ireland produced something more persuasive: an oval-shaped cropmark, the kind of subtle variation in vegetation growth that can betray buried features invisible at ground level. The cropmark is now thought to probably mark the remains of a rath, the type of circular or oval earthen enclosure, typically a farmstead of the early medieval period, that is one of the most common monument types across the Irish landscape. Probably, though, is doing real work in that sentence. No excavation has confirmed it, no upstanding remains have been recorded, and the site has never appeared on any edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map.
What the Rathonoragh site illustrates, quietly and without drama, is how provisional the archaeological record can be. A photograph misread, a field visit that found nothing, another photograph that hints at something after all; the presence or absence of a monument that may be over a thousand years old still has not been resolved.