Ecclesiastical enclosure, Croagh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ecclesiastical Sites
Close to the shore of Roaringwater Bay, on a gently south-west-facing slope of pasture, an oval enclosure sits quietly in the landscape, measuring roughly 60 metres east to west and 84 metres north to south.
What makes it unusual is not just its age but its internal complexity: low earthen banks, around three-quarters of a metre high, divide the interior into distinct zones, and tucked into the south-east quadrant is a circular stone-built structure with walls still standing to about 1.6 metres, an exterior diameter of 8.5 metres, and a clear opening facing south-east. This is not a tidily preserved national monument with signage and a car park. It is a working field.
Sites like this belong to a type of early medieval Irish settlement known as an ecclesiastical enclosure, a roughly circular or oval boundary that once defined sacred or monastic ground. The enclosure here is defined on its southern edge by a sharp break in the slope, and on the north by a surviving stone wall. Within the north-east quadrant lie the ruins of a church alongside a burial ground, the combination suggesting that this site served a community across a considerable span of time. The circular stone structure in the south-east is harder to categorise with certainty; roughly built rather than finely dressed, its function, whether domestic, agricultural, or ritual, remains open. Early ecclesiastical sites in Ireland frequently incorporated a range of structures within their enclosing boundaries, including oratories, cells for monks or hermits, and outbuildings for the practical work of the community.