Enclosure, Cooltomin, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Enclosures
Some of the most compelling entries in Ireland's archaeological record are the ones that have effectively ceased to exist.
At Cooltomin in County Limerick, there is a scheduled monument that, when a surveyor last visited, left nothing whatsoever to see. No earthwork, no ridge in the grass, no scatter of stone. Just pasture on a gentle south-east facing slope, with limestone breaking the surface nearby.
What was once here is known largely because of a single cartographic source. The 1841 Ordnance Survey six-inch map, the great Victorian project that first systematically documented Ireland's landscape in fine detail, recorded the arc of a circular enclosure at this spot. Circular enclosures of this kind are among the most common monument types in the Irish countryside, often the remains of ringforts, which were the enclosed farmsteads of early medieval families, used roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Some enclosed settlements of earlier prehistoric date also take a roughly circular form. The Cooltomin example was already incomplete by the time the surveyors reached it in the 1830s and 1840s, the road having clipped and truncated part of the circuit. What remained above ground at that point was only ever an arc, a partial ghost of the original shape. By the time Denis Power compiled the site record, uploaded in August 2011, even that arc had been levelled, lost to agricultural improvement or ground disturbance at some point in the intervening century and a half.
The site sits roughly thirty metres to the north-east of another recorded monument in the same townland. For anyone drawn to this kind of absence, that neighbouring entry might offer slightly more to orientate yourself by on the ground, though the landscape here is quietly ordinary, open grazing land without dramatic topography. The outcropping limestone in the area is worth noting as geological context rather than spectacle; it places the site within the broader karst zone that characterises much of this part of Limerick. There is no visitor infrastructure, no marker, and realistically no surface feature to seek out. What the site offers instead is a particular kind of reflection on how much the 1841 map preserves that the land itself no longer does.