Embanked enclosure, Craanhill, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Ringforts
On the west-facing slope of Craan Hill in County Wexford, there is a circular enclosure roughly 45 metres in external diameter that exists today almost entirely as a cartographic memory.
Walk the pasture now and you will find nothing to indicate it is there. No earthwork, no rise in the ground, no depression. The enclosure survives only because a surveyor in 1839 thought it worth recording on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, that first great systematic charting of the Irish landscape, which captured features that subsequent centuries of farming have since flattened or absorbed entirely.
Embanked enclosures of this kind are reasonably common in the Irish archaeological record, though their purposes varied considerably. Some were raths or ringforts, the enclosed farmsteads of early medieval Ireland, defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches. Others may have had ceremonial or funerary functions reaching back further still into prehistory. At roughly 45 metres across, the Craanhill example sits within a size range consistent with either tradition, though without excavation or surviving surface evidence, any firmer identification remains out of reach. What can be said is that its position near the summit of a west-facing slope follows a pattern seen at similar sites elsewhere, where elevation and aspect may have mattered as much for visibility and drainage as for any symbolic reason.
The 1839 OS six-inch survey recorded it clearly enough for the feature to be included in the archaeological inventory of the county, but between that mapping and the present day, the enclosure has been reduced to nothing detectable at ground level. It is the kind of place that reminds you how much of the Irish countryside is archaeological in ways that are no longer legible without a map from nearly two centuries ago.