Embanked enclosure, Loftushall, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Barrows
On the flat, open ground of the Hook Peninsula in County Wexford, a low grass-covered mound sits surrounded by a band of wet, uncultivated land that has resisted the plough for longer than anyone can say with certainty.
It is a quiet anomaly in an otherwise level agricultural landscape, measuring roughly 22 metres from northeast to southwest and standing just over a metre high, oval in shape and unremarkable at a glance. What makes it curious is not its current form but what it appears to have been, and how much it has changed even within living memory.
The 1839 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map recorded the site as a circular bivallate embanked enclosure, meaning it was then understood to have two concentric earthen banks, a form associated with a range of prehistoric and early medieval monument types. By 1987, field inspection described something more suggestive of internal complexity: a wet, sunken area within the enclosure rising toward a dry central mound. That combination, a raised centre within a defined earthwork, fits the profile of a barrow, a burial mound of the kind built across Ireland during the Bronze Age, though the classification here remains tentative. At some point after that 1987 description, the site was further reduced to its present flattened oval, losing whatever relief it once had. A linear earthwork lies approximately 30 metres to the east-northeast, hinting that this was not an isolated feature but part of a broader pattern of ancient activity across this corner of Wexford.


