Enclosure, Freahanes, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Enclosures
In the pastureland of Freahanes in West Cork, a south-facing slope holds what may once have been a ringfort, a small enclosed settlement of the kind that dots the Irish countryside in the thousands, most of them silent and unannounced.
What makes this particular example quietly interesting is how little of it remains. The ground is uneven, the grass grows over it, and there is no upstanding wall or earthwork to catch the eye. The site exists now mostly as a cartographic memory.
The only firm evidence for the enclosure comes from the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842, which recorded a small circular feature of under twenty metres in diameter at this location. That map series, produced during the first comprehensive topographic survey of Ireland, captured many earthworks and field boundaries that have since been eroded, ploughed out, or simply absorbed back into the landscape. The Freahanes enclosure appears to be one of those marginal survivors, noted on paper at a moment when it was already modest in scale, and now leaving little more than a slight irregularity in the ground to suggest anything was ever there.