Enclosure, Garrynderk North, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Enclosures
In a field of reclaimed pasture in north County Limerick, a low circular earthwork sits roughly eighteen metres across, its outline barely legible to anyone walking past.
It lies forty-five metres east of a small watercourse that doubles as a townland boundary, and it has been slowly losing its definition to grass and time for the better part of two centuries. What makes it quietly remarkable is not its size or drama but its persistence: this is a monument that has been absorbing agricultural pressure for generations and still refuses to disappear entirely.
The enclosure appears on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1840 as a circular earthwork, confirming it was already a recognised feature of the landscape when the first systematic mapping of Ireland was under way. By the time the more detailed twenty-five-inch edition was published in 1897, surveyors recorded a roughly circular area enclosed by a fosse and an external scarp running from the north-west, around the north, and continuing to the east. A fosse is simply a ditch, and a scarp is the steep face of an earthen bank, together forming a modest but deliberate boundary that would once have given the interior a defined, enclosed character. The purpose of such enclosures is not always easy to establish at this remove, but the form is consistent with early medieval settlement and agricultural enclosure traditions found widely across Munster. Notably, a moated site, a type of enclosed platform typically associated with Anglo-Norman settlement from the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, lies just three hundred metres to the south-east, suggesting that this part of the Garrynderk North townland carried repeated episodes of organised occupation across different periods.
The monument sits in working farmland, so access would depend on the goodwill of the landowner. For anyone with an interest in aerial and satellite archaeology, the enclosure is visible on Google Earth orthoimages even where it is no longer obvious on the ground, the fosse and scarp casting just enough shadow and tonal variation to trace the circuit. The best time to look, whether from above or on foot, is late winter or early spring, when low vegetation and low sun angles tend to bring earthworks like this back into relief. There is no signage and no formal designation visible here; it is the kind of site that rewards patience and a calibrated eye rather than a straightforward visit.
