Enclosure, Boolavoord, Co. Limerick

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Enclosures

Enclosure, Boolavoord, Co. Limerick

Some ancient sites announce themselves with standing stones or crumbling walls.

Others exist only as a faint shadow pressed into the earth, visible not to the walker on the ground but to a camera looking straight down from the sky. The enclosure at Boolavoord, in County Limerick, belongs to the second category. It was not discovered through fieldwork or folklore but through aerial photography, which means it survives, if it survives at all, as a cropmark or soilmark, the kind of subtle discolouration that only becomes legible when seen from above at the right angle and in the right light.

The monument was identified by The Discovery Programme, an Irish archaeological research body, using medium-altitude aerial photographs taken in 1986. The findings were subsequently published as part of a broader regional study: Doody, M. (2008), The Ballyhoura Hills Project, Discovery Programme Monograph No 7, Wordwell, covering pages 65 to 100. The reference assigned to the site is LI022: Bruff 9201: AP 4/3648. An enclosure, in the archaeological sense, typically refers to an area of ground defined by a bank, ditch, or wall, and such features are found across Ireland in a range of periods and uses, from early medieval farmsteads to prehistoric ceremonial sites. Without excavation, the precise date and function of the Boolavoord example remain uncertain, and the aerial record alone does not settle the question.

Boolavoord sits in the broader landscape of the Ballyhoura Hills, a low upland range straddling the Limerick and Cork border. Anyone hoping to visit with an eye to finding the enclosure should be realistic: what was detected from the air may be almost imperceptible at ground level, particularly in seasons when vegetation is dense. The area repays slow attention, and consulting the published monograph beforehand would give a visitor a clearer sense of what the aerial photographs actually show. The Bruff area of County Limerick is accessible enough by road, but the specific townland of Boolavoord is quiet farming country, and landowner courtesy is the usual expectation when approaching any such site across private ground.

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