Enclosure, Grange East, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Enclosures
In a field in Grange East, County Limerick, something circular lies just below the surface of the soil, invisible to anyone walking past but perfectly legible from above.
No earthwork rises above the grass, no stones break the surface; there is simply a ring, roughly thirty metres across, that plants seem to know about. This is a cropmark enclosure, a category of monument that exists, in a practical sense, only as information encoded in the differential growth of crops or grass. Where a buried ditch or bank alters the soil's drainage or nutrient content, vegetation above it grows taller or shorter, greener or paler, depending on the season and conditions. From the ground, nothing. From satellite imagery, a circle.
The enclosure at Grange East was recorded from aerial sources, identified by researcher Denis Power and uploaded to record in June 2013. The site is documented solely on the basis of its cropmark signature, visible on Google Maps and Bing Maps satellite imagery. Circular enclosures of this general type are among the most common buried monument forms in the Irish landscape. They range in date from the prehistoric through to the early medieval period, and without excavation it is rarely possible to say with confidence what a given example originally was. A diameter of around thirty metres places this one within the range typical of a ringfort, the term used for the enclosed farmsteads that were built across Ireland in their thousands between roughly the sixth and twelfth centuries, though earlier or later origins are always possible. The buried ditch or bank that defines the circle once served a practical boundary function, probably enclosing a domestic space, a farmyard, or a place of some local significance.
There is nothing to see at ground level, which is precisely what makes sites like this one worth understanding. The field itself is on private agricultural land, and the monument has no physical presence that would mark it out to a passing visitor. The most direct way to observe it is through the satellite view layers of online mapping tools, where the circular form becomes clear when conditions are right, typically during dry summers when moisture stress makes buried features most legible in the vegetation above them. Searching the Grange East area of County Limerick on either Google Maps or Bing Maps in satellite mode, and adjusting the zoom level carefully, is the most straightforward route to actually seeing what is recorded here.