Embanked enclosure, Poulmaloe, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Ringforts
At Poulmaloe in County Wexford, a circular earthwork roughly forty metres in diameter was recorded by surveyors in 1839 and then, in the generations that followed, effectively swallowed by the land.
The enclosure, defined by an earthen bank, sat on a slight prominence, the kind of low rise that would once have made it visible across the surrounding ground. Today, converted to reclaimed pasture, the field gives nothing away. There is no trace visible at ground level.
The 1839 Ordnance Survey six-inch map, one of the most detailed cartographic undertakings of nineteenth-century Ireland, caught the feature at a moment when it could still be distinguished in the landscape. Embanked enclosures of this type are found throughout Ireland and are often associated with early medieval settlement, though they can have a range of origins and functions, from ringfort-style farmsteads to enclosures connected with religious or ceremonial use. Without excavation it is rarely possible to say which category a given site belongs to. What is clear is that the Poulmaloe example was substantial enough in circumference to suggest a formally defined space, and prominent enough in its setting to have been placed deliberately on raised ground. A small quarry lies just to the north, which may itself have contributed to the degradation of the broader site over time.
The enclosure now belongs to a category that archaeologists sometimes call a cropmark or ploughzone site, meaning its story survives in maps and records rather than in anything a visitor could point to. The 1839 survey remains its most eloquent document.