Enclosure, Cloonygarra, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Enclosures
There is something quietly puzzling about a site that has been mapped, surveyed, photographed from the air, and recorded in an official heritage database, and yet yields almost nothing to look at.
In a field of pasture near Cloonygarra in County Limerick, roughly 400 metres east of a conifer plantation, lies what is tentatively classified as an enclosure, the kind of term archaeologists use to describe a bounded area, often earthen, that may once have served a domestic, agricultural, or ceremonial purpose. The trouble is that nobody is entirely sure this one is any of those things, or indeed that it is an enclosure at all.
The site's paper trail is a small study in interpretive drift. When the Ordnance Survey produced its six-inch map series in 1840, the area was recorded simply as a sub-rectangular field, with no suggestion of anything archaeologically significant beneath or around it. By the time the 25-inch edition appeared in 1897, the picture had shifted somewhat: surveyors noted a roughly rectangular area measuring approximately 42 metres on its longer axis, enclosed by a bank following the existing field boundary from west to south to east, with that bank reduced to a mere scarp along the northern side and an external fosse, essentially a ditch, running along the east. A fosse of that kind can indicate deliberate enclosure of a space for protection or demarcation. When Henry A. Wheeler visited and surveyed the site in 1965, however, he concluded it was a square-shaped field of no archaeological significance. Aerial photography taken between 2005 and 2012, and a Google Earth image from September 2019, show no surface remains whatsoever.
For anyone making their way out here, it is worth being honest about what the visit involves: a flat pasture with no visible earthworks, no markers, and no obvious focal point. The value, if there is one, is in the exercise of reading a landscape against its documentary record, in standing somewhere that cartographers and surveyors have disagreed about for nearly two centuries. The site sits in working farmland, so access would require landowner permission, and the ground underfoot is likely soft in wetter months. What you are looking at, or looking for, is the ghost of a boundary that may or may not have ever meant anything beyond the agricultural, which is, depending on your disposition, either a disappointment or the whole point.