Enclosure, Lowville, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Enclosures
In a flat field in north Galway, a near-perfect circle of mature sycamore and ash trees rises from level pastureland, tracing the line of an earthen bank that has stood largely intact for centuries.
Fifty-one metres across, with a flat-topped bank nearly two metres high and a shallow external fosse, or ditch, running around its outer edge, the structure is conspicuous and geometrically precise in a way that immediately raises questions about what, exactly, it was built to be.
The most likely explanation is that this is a tree-ring, a deliberate landscape feature planted as an ornamental enclosure during the era when this ground formed part of a demesne, the managed private estate of a landed household. Such plantings were reasonably common in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Ireland, used to create visual focal points across parkland, shelter game, or simply demonstrate that a proprietor had the land and inclination to shape his grounds. The structure appears on Ordnance Survey six-inch maps as a circular tree-planted enclosure, suggesting it was already well established by the time those surveys were conducted in the nineteenth century. What complicates a tidy interpretation, however, is the earthwork itself. A ringfort, the most common early medieval monument in the Irish countryside, typically consists of a circular bank and fosse enclosing a domestic settlement, and the dimensions and form here fall well within that range. The southwest gap, roughly four metres wide and almost certainly the original entrance, is consistent with ringfort construction. Whether the earthen circuit was raised in the early medieval period and later planted with trees by a demesne improver, or whether it was constructed from scratch as a purely decorative feature, remains an open question.