Enclosure, Curraghataggart, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Enclosures
At Curraghataggart in County Waterford, a faint depression in the ground is doing a quiet disappearing act. What was recorded in 1840 as an oval enclosure measuring roughly 50 metres north to south and 40 metres east to west had, by 1927, been reclassified on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map as a small circular quarry of around 30 metres in diameter. Today, the feature visible on the ground is smaller still, a gently dished, grass-covered circle of approximately 20 metres across, barely discernible on a mild north-facing slope. Three different descriptions across less than a century, and none of them quite agrees with the others.
The confusion itself tells a story. Enclosures of this general type, whether ringforts or the remains of earlier settled activity, were common across the Irish countryside and were frequently misread by later observers as natural features or the result of quarrying. The progressive shrinkage in the recorded dimensions here, from a substantial oval to a modest hollow, likely reflects a combination of genuine erosion, agricultural activity, and the reclassification that comes when an earthwork loses enough of its visible definition to stop looking archaeological. What the 1840 surveyors saw as a deliberate enclosure, their 1927 counterparts saw as a hole in the ground. The grass has kept growing over both interpretations.