Enclosure, Ballyloughlin, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Enclosures
There is an ancient enclosure at Ballyloughlin in County Wicklow that exists, for all practical purposes, only from the air.
Standing on the level ground above the gentle drop to the stream to the south, a visitor would see nothing out of the ordinary, no earthwork, no ridge, no shadow in the grass. The site reveals itself only when conditions are right and the camera is airborne, appearing as a cropmark, the kind of ghostly outline that emerges in dry summers when buried features affect how crops or grass grow above them, leaving a faint but readable trace of what lies beneath.
What the aerial photograph shows is a subcircular enclosure roughly thirty metres in diameter, defined by a fosse, which is a defensive or boundary ditch, cut into the ground and long since filled in. To the south, the photograph also suggests a gap in the enclosure boundary and a possible annexe of around forty metres in diameter. Enclosures of this general type are found across Ireland and are associated with a wide range of periods and functions, from early medieval ringforts used as farmsteads to prehistoric ceremonial or settlement sites. Without excavation, the precise date and purpose of the Ballyloughlin example remain unknown. The positioning, on flat ground with a stream nearby, fits a pattern common to many Irish enclosures, where proximity to water and a degree of natural surveillance over the surrounding terrain were practical considerations.
Because the site leaves no surface trace, there is little to seek out on a visit in the conventional sense. The value here is less in the looking than in the knowing, that somewhere beneath an ordinary field in Wicklow, a circular boundary dug by people whose names and intentions are entirely lost continues, very quietly, to exist.