Enclosure, Drumbeg, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Enclosures
On a rough east-facing slope in Drumbeg, County Sligo, a D-shaped enclosure sits in open pasture, its purpose unrecorded and its age unconfirmed.
That shape alone sets it apart from the more familiar circular ringforts that pepper the Irish countryside. Here, the geometry is flattened on one side, the straight edge formed not by a built wall but by a natural rocky scarp running along the north-east, as though whoever made this place recognised a ready-made boundary and built to meet it.
The enclosure measures roughly 31.8 metres by 23.4 metres internally, a space comparable in area to a large house and garden today. On the eastern and northern sides, a stone wall once defined the perimeter, though it has collapsed considerably over time. The surviving wall is about 2.3 metres wide, suggesting it was originally a substantial construction, but its interior face now stands only around 0.4 metres above ground, and the exterior face barely registers at 0.1 metres. The interior ground slopes downward toward the east. Without excavation, it is impossible to say with confidence what the enclosure was used for, whether it enclosed a homestead, a farming yard, or something else entirely. Enclosures of this type appear across Ireland in various forms, and many remain undated and unstudied in any depth, quiet shapes in the landscape that outlasted whatever records or memories once explained them.